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Species as the Global Historical Subject Species as the Global Historical Subject
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Hope and Historical Resources Hope and Historical Resources
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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15 Using Japan to Think Globally: The Natural Subject of History and Its Hopes
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Published:July 2013
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Abstract
This concluding chapter explains how Japan, demographically and in other ways, provides a global perspective about the future in relation to the national past. It first considers some of the critical problems raised by global environmental history, such as whether the human species can serve as the proper subject of history, or how we can find hope in the face of catastrophic climate change. It argues that Japan can help address these globally generated conundrums less as a limited case study than as a theoretical and practical resource. It also examines how the new materialism of environmental history is reshaping older global stories and challenging the distinction between premodern and modern, noncapitalist developmentalism and capitalism, and Asia and the West. Finally, it discusses the reasons why “the nation,” and Japan in particular, is still a worthy object of interest to the environmental historian.
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