Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Introduction: The Machine as Emperor Part 3 Part 1: Technology and Unequal Exchange Chapter 4 Chapter 1: Technology and Economics: The Interfusion of the Social and the Material Chapter 5 Chapter 2: Cornucopia or Zero-Sum Game: The Epistemology of Sustainability Chapter 6 Chapter 3: The Thermodynamics of Imperialism: Towards an Ecological Theory of Unequal Exchange Chapter 7 Chapter 4: Ecosystems, World Systems, and Environmental Justice Chapter 8 Chapter 5: Conceptualizing Accumulation from Spondylus Shells to Fossil Fuels Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Use Value, Energy, and the Image of Unlimited Good Chapter 10 Chapter 7: Language and the Material: Probing our Categories Chapter 11 Chapter 8: Symbolic Technologies: Machines and the Marxian Notion of Fetishism Part 12 Part 2: Money, Modernity and Personhood Chapter 13 Chapter 9: Money, Reflexivity, and the Semiotics of Modernity Chapter 14 Chapter 10: Ecology as Semiotics: A Contextualist Manifesto Chapter 15 Chapter 11: Exchange, Personhood, and Human Ecology Chapter 16 Chapter 12: The Abstraction of Discourse and Identity: A Case Study Chapter 17 Afterword: Culture, Modernity, and Power: The Relevance of Anthropology Chapter 18 References Chapter 19 Index
Alf Hornborg is professor and chair of the Human Ecology Division at Lund University, Sweden
There is more to culture than meets the eye, that product of
cultural processing designed to overlook that 'more'; that 'more'
being the allegedly natural and objective foundations of our life
in common with all its iniquities and inanities. This is the
message of Hornborg's astonishing book, bound to spur the
social-scientific community to take another hard look on their own
seemingly self-evident concepts and hidden from view assumptions.
The book crowns years of study and thought which went deeper than
even the most earnest and acute self-scrutiny of anthropologists
and economists went thus far. Very seldom is describing the
publication of a book as revolutionary event as apt. Hornborg's
oeuvre stands a chance to revolutionise not only the paradigm of
the theory of modern society, but the way we divide human actions
from their precultural conditions and so called 'unanticipated
consequences.'
*Zygmunt Bauman, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Universities of
Leeds and Warsaw*
This book will be the talk of anthropology in the next decade,
since it provides a compelling connection between culture theory,
social justice, and environmental crisis. The linkage of energy,
unequal exchange, and world systems theory is original and
masterful. The discussion of money, fetishism, and meaning is
likewise. Hornborg's thoughtful and rigorous synthesis renews
critical social science in a time of fragmentation and doubt.
Scholars in anthropology and interdisciplinary environmental
studies are sure to be impressed.
*Josiah McC. Heyman, (Michigan Technological University)*
The strength of the book is its interdisciplinarity....This book
would be appropriate reading for those social scientists, whether
anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, or
environmentalists, interested in global studies, Marxist critiques
of culture, human-environmental relations, and science and
technology studies.
*Journal Of World-Systems Research*
At a time when some paleobiologists are predicting that humanity
has so fouled its nest that our planet will eventually be ceded to
rats and ants, Alf Hornborg is more hopeful... [an] ambitious,
thought -provoking study of the tensions between conservation and
economic development...Hornborg is convincing. He says one of
anthropology's greatest challenges is to deconstruct the most
powerful discourses of our time which present themselves as somehow
above and beyond culture.
*Anthropological Theory*
Hornborg's The Power of the Machine offers a rich theoretical
analysis of how technology masks the inequalities between nations,
humans, and ecosystems within the World System... he challenges
conventional political economic and sociological perspectives about
global underdevelopment... As a truly interdisciplinary writer,
Hornborg combines perspectives from natural science, political
economy, and cultural anthropology to critique not only global
unequal exchange but also the very categories that we, as social
scientists, use to analyze such exchange... The strength of this
book is its interdisciplinarity. One would hope to find an
interdisciplinary focus in a volume written by several authors, but
not expect to find such focus in a single-authored text... I
appreciate Hornberg's two-pronged goal: not only does he
demonstrate how technology operates as a mechanism of Western
hegemony but he challenges us as social scientists to be wary of
the role that we play in analyzing such inequities — to not reify
the machine is to call global exchange by its real name: deliberate
uneven development.
*Journal Of World Systems Research, Ix, I, Winter 2003*
Hornborg will be aware of the irony that his thoroughly modern
study (professional erudition, academic logic and technique,
mass-produced book aimed at an academic audience, etc.) is a
radical critique of the conditions of its own production. But in so
doing Hornborg poses new and interesting questions. By also
suggesting how we might approach the issues they raise the author
has made a major contribution to debates about modernity, global
inequalities, technology and the fate of the environment.
*Ethnos*
This is a critical discussion of the whole range of world-system
type theories, which is simultaneously a highly original
contribution to the genre and a splendid introduction to the
implicit and explicit understandings of the relevant literature.
The discussion, which ranges widely through cultures and history,
is firmly anchored in classic anthropological theory and data even
as it projects its conclusions onto the varieties of malaise that
bedevil the modern world. The impression is of disciplined, learned
open-mindedness. This is the sort of book one reads with pleasure
and profit even while one may disagree with some of it—what a real
'contribution' is all about.
*Igor Kopytoff, (University of Pennsylvania)*
This is one of the most thought provoking books I've read lately...
Hornborg wants to understand how it is that relations of power come
to seem inevitable and natural... He urges a truly holistic study
of humankind. We Americans would all do well to follow his example
and learn from one another.
*Journal of Anthropological Research, Vol. 59, 2003*
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