Publication Type

Book Review

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

11-2018

Abstract

Remote, extractive landscapes are often marked by persistent pollution, particularly when the extracted resource in question comes from underground and serves as a source of energy. The toxic legacies of fracking, mountaintop removal and more conventional mining projects are well documented at this point. The disproportionately polluted extractive ‘hinterland’ looms especially large in recent accounts of the rural West of the United States, which tend to emphasize the ways in which these ‘peripheries’ have enabled consumption and prosperity elsewhere (e.g. Kuletz 1998; Needham 2014; Voyles 2015). Dana Powell’s Landscapes of power (2018) moves swiftly beyond a recognition of such patterns to offer a complex, multivalent account of how power circulates within and shapes these landscapes. Centering the experience of inhabiting such terrain, rather than simply removing materials from it, the book presents a powerful case for attending to the role of ‘hinterland’ communities in the production and consumption of energy.

Discipline

Energy Policy

Research Areas

Integrative Research Areas

Publication

Journal of Peasant Studies

Volume

45

Issue

7

First Page

1548

Last Page

1550

ISSN

0306-6150

Identifier

10.1080/03066150.2018.1466434

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1080/03066150.2018.1466434

Included in

Energy Policy Commons

Share

COinS