Timothy Neale is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Deakin University and author of Wild Articulations: Environmentalism and Indigeneity in Northern Australia.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Acknowledgments xi Prologue xv Introduction 1 1. Technical Control 25 Interlude 1: Sing-Along with David and Linda Hurley 59 2. Communicative Control 62 Interlude 2: Sensng with Fire Analysts 90 3. Epistemic Control 94 Interlude 3: Lunch with Phil Cheney 125 4. Moral Control 129 Interlude 4: Investigating with Bomber 134 155 5. Indigenous Control 159 Conclusion: After Control 184 Notes 195 References 209 Index
“How to Control Fire on a Burning Continent takes us on a fascinating journey of the worlds of fire control: emergency operations rooms, fire risk assessments, fire science, firefighters, and firefighting. Timothy Neale persuasively argues that in many cases climate crisis is being confronted not as a rupture that changes everything, but through reinvestment in the ‘impossible promise of environmental control.’”—Stephen Collier, Professor of City and Regional Planning, University of California, Berkeley
“This book offers a much-needed account of the patchy, evolving grammars and logics of wildfire management amidst global climate disruption. Confronting the colonial instinct to control that often misdirects human efforts, Timothy Neale offers an alternative that draws on Indigenous approaches to living with wildfires, with care and humility.”—Candis Callison, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Journalism, Media, and Public Discourse, University of British Columbia
“That there is a global wildfire crisis is beyond dispute. With intelligence and sensitivity, Timothy Neale’s unique ethnography discloses the limits of institutional authority and technological mastery in confronting this crisis, revealing the moral complexity and intellectual confusion of fire bureaucracies. This important book shows how through shared experience and respect for human and nonhuman life we might have a deeper relationship with wildfire and escape the seductive illusion of ‘control’.”—David MJS Bowman, ARC Laureate Professor, University of Tasmania

