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Energy and domination: contesting the fossil myth of fuel expansion

Cara Daggett

2020Environmental Politics22 citationsDOI

Abstract

A just and sustainable energy transition will require not only new fuels, but new energy stories. The dominant, ‘fossil’ myth of energy, depoliticizes the forward march of energy intensity over human history. Instead, we need energy stories that more fully account for the role of political domination in major energy transitions of the past. Fossil domination is historically unique in its marriage of racial capitalism and imperialism, but it may also reflect broader patterns of fuel transition. I draw upon recent research on two momentous energy transitions – the rise of grain states and fossil fuel empires – that show how political innovations in labor extraction and domination were the main catalysts for transition, rather than superior fuel technologies or a public thirst for more energy. Emphasizing the role of domination across energy history disrupts the fossil myth, while also making space for more transformative energy stories.

Topics & Concepts

Fossil fuelTransformative learningEnergy transitionPoliticsEnergy (signal processing)CapitalismMythologyPolitical economyEnvironmental impact of the energy industrySociologyNatural resource economicsEnergy policyRenewable energyPolitical scienceEconomicsEcologyLawHistoryBiologyMedicinePathologyClassicsStatisticsAlternative medicineMathematicsPedagogyPanacea (medicine)Global Energy and Sustainability ResearchEnergy and Environment ImpactsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation Policies
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