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Retrospective Redundancy: The Anthropocene and the Crisis of Historical Comprehension

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  • Leskanich Alexandre

    (Independent Scholar, London, W14 0NS, UK)

Abstract

This essay contends that the Anthropocene as a historicization in planetary history is symptomatic of a lurking crisis in historical comprehension. This crisis – rooted in the technologically-induced incongruence between past and future – more generally speaks to the consequent diminishment of human historical comprehension under conditions of unprecedented anthropogenic upheaval, and, ultimately, to the inadequacy of the historicizing impulse itself. Thus the Anthropocene, I suggest, fails in its retrospective redundancy to compensate for the incoherence of the historical situation it aims to comprehend, and is further symptomatic of a world that has not merely been historically mismanaged, but in which historical comprehension has itself broken down.

Suggested Citation

  • Leskanich Alexandre, 2021. "Retrospective Redundancy: The Anthropocene and the Crisis of Historical Comprehension," New Global Studies, De Gruyter, vol. 15(2-3), pages 181-192, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:bpj:nglost:v:15:y:2021:i:2-3:p:181-192:n:12
    DOI: 10.1515/ngs-2021-0016
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