1st Edition

Environmental Hermeneutics in the Anthropocene Nature and the Conflict of Interpretations

Edited By David Utsler, Forrest Clingerman, Brian Treanor Copyright 2026
278 Pages
by Routledge

278 Pages
by Routledge

Environmental Hermeneutics in the Anthropocene is a diverse collection of essays that approach contemporary environmental problems with the tools and perspectives provided by the tradition of philosophical hermeneutics, advanced by philosophers such as Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, and Paul Ricoeur. Engaging both established and new voices, this book presents a significant contribution to... Read more

 Acknowledgements

 Contributors

 Preface

David Utsler & Brian Treanor

 Introduction

David Utsler & Brian Treanor

 1 Earthy Hermeneutics: Beyond the Metaphor of the Text

Brian Treanor

 2 Translating Nature: Hermeneutics, Otherness, and the Limits of Environmental Understanding

Nathan M. Bell

 3 Hermeneutics in the Wilderness

Cassandra Falke

 4 Interpretation and the Anthropocene

Alexander Federau

 5 The Hermeneutical Challenge of the Anthropocene: Rethinking Environmental Hermeneutics

Patryk Szaj

 6 Sacrifice Zones and Interpreting the Anthropocene

Forrest Clingerman

 7 The Beautiful and the Good in Practice: Gadamer and Environmental Hermeneutics

William Konchak

 8 Is There a Measure on Earth? Heidegger and the Hermeneutical Problems of De-growth

Magdalena Hoły-Łuczaj

 9 Situating Hermeneutics in Environmental Humanities: place, meaning, and interpretation

Martinho Soares

 10 Interpreting Environmental Sustainability: Envisioning a Sustainable Future with Paul Ricoeur

Maria Cristina Clorinda Vendra

 11 Fragility and Finitude in the Face of the Climate Crisis: On Worldview and Action

Christina M. Gschwandtner

 12 Re-Placing Displacement

David Utsler

 13 Sketching Gadamer’s Contribution to Landscape Aesthetics: Play, Space, and Historicity

Elena Romagnoli

 Afterword: Environmental Justice and the Moral Terrains of Environmental Hermeneutics in the Anthropocene

Robert Melchior Figueroa

Biography

David Utsler teaches philosophy at North Central Texas College (USA). Utsler received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of North Texas, specializing in philosophical hermeneutics and environmental philosophy. He is a co-editor of Interpreting Nature: The Emerging Field of Environmental Hermeneutics (Fordham 2014) and is the author of Paul Ricoeur and Environmental Philosophy (Lexington 2024). He has peer-reviewed articles in journals such as Philosophy Today, Environmental Philosophy, Quaestiones Disputatae, and Analecta Hermeneutica. Utsler currently serves as the co-director of The International Association for Environmental Philosophy and treasurer for The North Texas Philosophical Association.

Forrest Clingerman was Professor of Religion and Philosophy at Ohio Northern University, USA. He researches on a variety of topics related to environmental thought, including place, climate, aesthetics, and the Anthropocene. He is co-editor of Arts, Religion, and the Environment: Exploring Nature’s Texture (Brill 2018) and Interpreting Nature: The Emerging Field of Environmental Hermeneutics (Fordham 2014).

Brian Treanor is professor of philosophy at Loyola Marymount University, where he teaches courses in environmental philosophy, philosophy and literature, and philosophy of religion, among other subjects. In 2011, he was awarded the President’s Fritz B. Burns Distinguished Teaching Award. He is the author or co-editor of ten books, including: Melancholic Joy (Bloomsbury 2021), Philosophy in the American West (Routledge 2020), Carnal Hermeneutics (Fordham 2015), Being-in-Creation (Fordham 2015), Emplotting Virtue (SUNY 2014), and Interpreting Nature (Fordham 2014). He is currently working on two monographs, one exploring the meaning of “nature” and “wilderness,” and the other arguing for the selfhood of non-human nature.