ABSTRACT

We are living in an age when 'nature' seems to be on the brink of extinction yet, at the same time, 'nature' is becoming increasingly ubiquitous and unstable as a category for representation and debate.
Futurenatural brings together leading theorists of culture and science to discuss the concept of 'nature' - its past, present and future. Contributors discuss the impact on our daily life of recent developments on biotechnologies, electronic media and ecological politics. Increasingly, scientific theories and models have been taken up as cultural metaphors that have material effects in transforming 'ways of seeing' and 'structures of feeling'.
The book addresses the issue of whether political and cultural debates about the body and environment can take place without reference to 'nature' or the 'natural'. This collection considers how we might 'think' a future developing from emergent scientific theories and discourses. What cultural forms may be produced when new knowledges challenge and undermine traditional ways of conceiving the 'natural'.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction: look who’s talking

part |2 pages

Part I The nature of ‘nature’

chapter 1|14 pages

The future is a risky business

chapter 2|14 pages

Nature/‘nature’

chapter 3|20 pages

The production of nature

chapter 5|14 pages

Knowing, loving and hating nature

chapter 6|18 pages

Nature’s r

part |2 pages

Part II Human nature

chapter 7|14 pages

The biological gaze

chapter 8|12 pages

A natural order of things?

chapter 9|14 pages

Genes ’R’ Us

chapter 10|18 pages

Narratives of artificial life

chapter 11|16 pages

Posthuman unbounded

part |2 pages

Part III FutureNatural

chapter 12|20 pages

Postmodern virtualities

chapter 13|14 pages

The virtual complexity of culture

chapter 14|18 pages

Art and science in Chaos

chapter 15|18 pages

Supernatural futures

chapter 17|18 pages

Lacan with quantum physics

part |2 pages

A (forked) tailpiece

chapter 18|10 pages

An interview with Satan