The idea in Post Green: Literature, Culture, and Environment is not to create another binary like East/West, but rather a call for a shift in the order of perception. The contributors signal a movement from the conventional understanding of green thinking--acknowledging both the limitations of the green approaches as well as to explore new and holistic perspectives on environmental stewardship. This book proposes to move beyond the monoculture of the mind toward a celebration of diversity and plurality. While the movement from red to green was a politics of difference, as essays in this book emphasize, the shift toward post green is based on an all-inclusive and holistic vision that contains within itself both difference and multiplicity, something that is quintessential for the stability of our ecosystem. Such affirmative bio-politics toward an alternative symbiosis challenges intellectual theorising, without minimizing the need for radical questioning. It urges the need to do away with disciplinary boundaries drawing hopes for a new spiritual geography of the mind to surface.
Contributions by: Murali Sivaramakrishnan, Animesh Roy, Oluseye Abiodun Babatunde, Debarati Bandyopadhyay, Ann Fisher-Wirth, Peter I-min Huang, Jack Hunter, Peter Quigley, Charles Reitz, K. Satchidanandan, Ann Skea, Mihai A. Stroe, Usha VT, Kerim Can Yazgünoglu, Nikoleta Zampaki