"It has to be at the heart of #climatejustice politics: To find a way to confront and reveal the ideology of this man versus nature framework." Jason W Moore in a recent conversation:
https://www.listennotes.com/de/podcasts/guerrilla-history/world-ecology-and-the-HjZUSLTqihD/
He is eloquently unfolding a whole historical framework of the #capitalocene in a few sentences and he convincingly explains that the whole project has started with the production of "cheap nature" after the Columbian Invasion.
This is an important addition to Marx' Primitive Accumulation.
Ok, this conversation is mushrooming a little bit!
But wait, the first half an hour is really worth listening.
Here's a more focused podcast conversation from Berlin, Germany:
https://www.listennotes.com/de/podcasts/burning-futures-on/11-climate-crisis-planetary-3pGzroZ1KeJ/
And here another interview, which might be better understandable for "beginners":
https://www.listennotes.com/de/podcasts/jacobin-radio/a-world-to-win-the-DXeHUhypm5B/
"The thought concepts we use in our everyday language of society versus nature have their roots in the imperialist projects of the 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th centuries."
Remarkable also his notion of "climate class divide, climate patriarchy and climate apartheid".