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Environmental Guilt and Shame: Signals of Individual and Collective Responsibility and the Need for Ritual Responses - Hardcover
Environmental Guilt and Shame: Signals of Individual and Collective Responsibility and the Need for Ritual Responses - Hardcover
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by Sarah E. Fredericks (Author)
Bloggers confessing that they waste food, non-governmental organizations naming corporations selling unsustainably harvested seafood, and veterans apologizing to Native Americans at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation for environmental and social devastation caused by the United States government all signal the existence of action-oriented guilt and identity-oriented shame about participation in environmental degradation. Environmental Guilt and Shame demonstrates that these moral emotions are common among environmentally friendly segments of the United States but have received little attention from environmental ethicists though they can catalyze or hinder environmental action. Concern about environmental guilt and shame among "everyday environmentalists" reveals the practical, emotional, ethical, and existential issues raised by environmental guilt and shame and ethical insights about guilt, shame, responsibility, agency, and identity. A typology of guilt and shame enables the
development and evaluation of these ethical insights.
Author Biography
Sarah E. Fredericks, Associate Professor of Environmental Ethics, University of Chicago Divinity School
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