Saharan Winds

Energy Systems and Aeolian Imaginaries in Western Sahara
West Virginia University Press
West Virginia University Press
Energy and Society
9781959000235
$29.99
Paperback
2024-10-01
2024-10-01
Winner, ASLE-UKI Critical Book Prize, 2025
Finalist, Ecocritical Book Award, 2025, Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE)
Longlisted, Bread and Roses Award for Radical Publishing, 2025
A history of Saharan winds melds into a discussion of energy development and the politics of energy systems, arguing that changing the way we imagine and understand wind will help ensure a globally just wind energy future.
Winner, ASLE-UKI Critical Book Prize, 2025
Finalist, Ecocritical Book Award, 2025, Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE)
Longlisted, Bread and Roses Award for Radical Publishing, 2025
Saharan Winds contributes to a fairer energy horizon by illuminating the role of imaginaries–how we understand energy sources such as wind and the meanings we attach to wind–in determining the wider politics, whether oppressive or just, associated with energy systems. This book turns to various cultures and communities across different time periods in one space, Western Sahara, to explore how wind imaginaries affect the development, management, and promotion of windfarms; the distribution of energy that windfarms produce; and, vitally, the type of politics mediated by all these elements combined. Highlighting the wind-fueled oppression of colonial energy systems, the book shows the potential offered by nomadic, Indigenous wind imaginaries for contributing to a fairer energy future.
6.000in x 9.000in x 0.790in
Weight data not found for this book.
"The mixture of archival, literary and fieldwork-derived ethnographic material is a refreshing approach . . . within the field of energy humanities."
—Dominic Boyer, author of Energopolitics: Wind and Power in the Anthropocene
"A novel approach into the intersection between colonialism and wind energy extraction."
—Alexander Dunlap, author of Enforcing Ecocide: Power, Policing, and Planetary Militarization
268 Pages
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