A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology

Flying Fox and Drifting Sand, British zoologist Francis Ratcliffe’s popular 1938 account of his ecological study of the problem of the fruit bat problem in Queensland and soil erosion in the arid pastoral areas of South Australia, is a prominent instance of an influential form of cultural critique i...

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Main Author: Russell, Arthur
Other Authors: Susan Luckman
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Routledge: Taylor and Francis Group 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9122
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author Russell, Arthur
author2 Susan Luckman
author_facet Susan Luckman
Russell, Arthur
author_sort Russell, Arthur
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Flying Fox and Drifting Sand, British zoologist Francis Ratcliffe’s popular 1938 account of his ecological study of the problem of the fruit bat problem in Queensland and soil erosion in the arid pastoral areas of South Australia, is a prominent instance of an influential form of cultural critique in which scientists reflect publicly on the social, political and cultural interrelations and impacts of their disciplines. Notable in this genre are Aldo Leopold’s essay ‘The Land Ethic’, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb and, in the Australian context, Tim Flannery’s The Future Eaters. These text s are significant because they mix up the natural, social and cultural, and play a part in the emergence of ecocentric models of culture and society. Focusing on the ecological revision of the problem and concept of drought, this paper examines Ratcliffe’s popular ecology in relation to a significant articulation of scientific, literary, and political discursive practices at the time. Then, by establishing the international connections of this local instance, a picture is presented of the wider dispersal of this new articulation. It is argued that by specifying these practices and their interrelationship we can track a particular instance of the early emergence of ecologically inflected social theory.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-91222017-01-30T11:10:37Z A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology Russell, Arthur Susan Luckman Flying Fox and Drifting Sand, British zoologist Francis Ratcliffe’s popular 1938 account of his ecological study of the problem of the fruit bat problem in Queensland and soil erosion in the arid pastoral areas of South Australia, is a prominent instance of an influential form of cultural critique in which scientists reflect publicly on the social, political and cultural interrelations and impacts of their disciplines. Notable in this genre are Aldo Leopold’s essay ‘The Land Ethic’, Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb and, in the Australian context, Tim Flannery’s The Future Eaters. These text s are significant because they mix up the natural, social and cultural, and play a part in the emergence of ecocentric models of culture and society. Focusing on the ecological revision of the problem and concept of drought, this paper examines Ratcliffe’s popular ecology in relation to a significant articulation of scientific, literary, and political discursive practices at the time. Then, by establishing the international connections of this local instance, a picture is presented of the wider dispersal of this new articulation. It is argued that by specifying these practices and their interrelationship we can track a particular instance of the early emergence of ecologically inflected social theory. 2008 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9122 Routledge: Taylor and Francis Group restricted
spellingShingle Russell, Arthur
A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title_full A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title_fullStr A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title_full_unstemmed A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title_short A Scientist among the Sandstorms: Drought and the Discursive contexts of Francis Ratcliffe’s popular ecology
title_sort scientist among the sandstorms: drought and the discursive contexts of francis ratcliffe’s popular ecology
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9122