integralni soucasti vykladu planetarity musi byt ohen, jednak jako pohon pro civilizaci 1.0, jednak jako technika managementu ekosystemu (
HM framework)
2017 Firepower: Geopolitical Cultures in the Anthropocene
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14650045.2017.1344835
The human control of fire is a relatively neglected part of the discussion of the contemporary transformation of the planet. Thinking about it in terms of geopolitics is a way to link climate adaptation, extinction and the possibilities of extending traditional analyses of political ecology to the global scale. Such thinking is explicitly rejected as the appropriate premises for foreign policy action by the Trump administration which poses American greatness in terms of traditional understandings of firepower. This clash of geopolitical cultures is now key to global politics, where dramatic landscape transformation, related species extinctions as well as climate change results directly and indirectly from human control of combustion. Firepower is a matter of military technology as well as, in the form of fossil fuel combustion, the essential energy source that fuels the global economy. Focusing on combustion as a key geophysical force in contemporary geopolitics offers useful insights into the Anthropocene discussion and, in particular, the two planetary boundaries of climate change and biodiversity loss, which are key to contemporary efforts at global environmental governance.
We Did Start the Fire: Climate Change & the Curse of Hope
https://abeautifulresistance.org/site/2019/10/16/bxqvw9zdoycegy854b1hdacy5axjeb
One possible beginning for the Anthropocene which has not received as much attention is the prehistoric domestication of fire by humans. As early as a million years ago, hominids began using fire in a controlled way. That’s actually before Neanderthals and modern humans diverged on the family tree. James Scott, author of Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States, describes the revolutionary impact of the domestication of fire:
The effects of anthropogenic fire are so massive that they might be judged, in an evenhanded account of the human impact on the natural world, to overwhelm crop and livestock domestications. Why human fire as landscape architect doesn’t register as it ought to in our historical accounts is perhaps that its effects were spread over hundreds of millennia and were accomplished by ‘precivilized’ peoples also known as ‘savages.’ In our age of dynamite and bulldozers, it was a very slow-motion sort of environmental landscaping. But its aggregate effects were momentous.”
2017 Scott - AGAINST THE GRAIN : a deep history of the earliest states.
http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=65A0DCDD231DF0E360B657A6FFFE6ACB
2001 Pyne - Fire: A Brief History
https://www.amazon.com/dp/029598144X/
"Fire: A Brief History packs into one slender volume a sweeping tale of fire, and man's interactions with fire, from prehistory to the dawn of the twenty-first century. Pyne's perceptive words and tightly organized sentences allow him to suggest many thought-provoking ideas and to bring to his audiencea fascinating story of fire's role in shaping our world.
TADEAS