Truly this is humanitys last stand: we can let the endless growth machine and its accompanying systems of oppressions choke the planet and kill one another, or we can rise up to support locally-waged struggles for justice linked with defending humanity. We need an anthropolitics more than ever.
from the Introduction by Mark Schuller
Advanced Praise forHumanitys Last Stand
Humanitys Last Stand is an electrifying work that dissects a range of interconnected problemsclimate change, ultra-right nationalism, and global inequalityand proposes concrete steps to avert total catastrophe. This highly readable book is prescient, if not premonitory. It is essential reading for anyone interested in our species long-term survival. Anthropology at its finest!
Roberto J. Gonz lez, author of Connected: How a Mexican Village Created Its Own Cell Phone Network
Mark Schullers approach to the convergent crises pushing us toward human catastrophe and planetary disaster should be taken to heart. With admirable conviction and commitment to radical empathy and pragmatic solidarity, he makes a bold argument for a publicly-engaged anthropological imagination that contributes a holistic understanding of and concrete solutions to urgent global crises.
Faye V. Harrison, author of Outsider Within: Reworking Anthropology in the Global Age
Schullers brilliant book is critical reading for all of us who work to envision, and bring into being, a socially and ecologically just world. Grounded in a politics of solidarity built through the understanding of, and dismantling of privilege, he mobilizes a new vision for what an anthropological imagination can afford us in terms of activist practice and radical empathy.
Paige West, editor of From Reciprocity to Relationality: Anthropological Possibilities
An urgent and much- needed contribution to our world in crisis. Schuller lays out crucial groundwork for how an anthropological reimagining of global social, political, and economic relationships can save us from ourselves. In clear prose, he shows the public how anthropology can be deployed as a way to create more empathy in these troubling times.
Jason De Le n, executive director of the Undocumented Migration Project, author of The Land of Open Graves: Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail
Mark Schuller takes anthropology to the public with critical insights on the historical and contemporary that expose the catastrophic social realities of global racial capitalism. He implores the willing to forge futures where differences matter and praxis of solidarity are intentionally quotidian. Humanitys Last Stand is a pivotal ecological intervention for these times of crisis.
Gina Athena Ulysse, author of Because When God is Too Busy: Haiti, me & THE WORLD
When I finished reading, I needed to catch my breath. The book is furiously and forcefully written, engaging both historical and contemporary issues. Most productively, Schuller puts analyses written by political organizers and anthropologists into conversation, showing how they inform each other and move us forward together. This book is needed for this moment in history.
Ruth Gomberg-Muoz, author of Labor and Legality: An Ethnography of a Mexican Immigrant Network
Mark Schuller has an in-your-face and challenging style. It conveys his passion and the urgency of the situation addressed in the book. It is more than appropriateit is engaging. Humanitys Last Stand is an important intervention at a moment of economic, political, cultural, and ecological crisis in the United States and the world. This is a book that has the potential to change the minds of many.
Kevin Yelvington, editor of Afro-Atlantic Dialogues: Anthropology in the Diaspora