The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century
James Howard Kunstler
Amazon: The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century
The indictment of suburbia and the car culture that the author presented in The Geography of Nowhere turns
apocalyptic in this vigorous, if overwrought, jeremiad. Kunstler notes
signs that global oil production has peaked and will soon dwindle, and
argues in an eye-opening, although not entirely convincing, analysis
that alternative energy sources cannot fill the gap, especially in
transportation. The result will be a Dark Age in which "the center does
not hold" and "all bets are off about civilization's future." Absent
cheap oil, auto-dependent suburbs and big cities will collapse, along
with industry and mechanized agriculture; serfdom and horse-drawn carts
will stage a comeback; hunger will cause massive "die-back"; otherwise
"impotent" governments will engineer "designer viruses" to cull the
surplus population; and Asian pirates will plunder California. Kunstler
takes a grim satisfaction in this prospect, which promises to settle his
many grudges against modernity. A "dazed and crippled America," he
hopes, will regroup around walkable, human-scale towns; organic local
economies of small farmers and tradesmen will replace an alienating
corporate globalism; strong bonds of social solidarity will be reforged;
and our heedless, childish culture of consumerism will be forced to
grow up. Kunstler's critique of contemporary society is caustic and
scintillating as usual, but his prognostications strain credibility. (May)
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