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Photo: Nick Rahier

Book Project "City-Heat: Sensing Viable Futures in Nakuru, Kenya"

Anthropologist Nick Rahier is the author of a forthcoming book on hotter conditions in Nakuru, Kenya, under contract with University College London Press.

Heat has become the metaphor of choice through which politics, philosophy, and science speak about the current polycrisis. Heat, in these instances, is primarily translated into temperature metrics such as thresholds and tipping points that feed predictions regarding the planet’s future. Yet, reducing heat to such temperature metrics flattens the complexity of lived experience and obscures the different ways in which communities respond to runaway change. In City-Heat, Nick Rahier breaks with temperature-based understandings of heat and delves into a richer, more emic exploration of its socio-cultural and sensory dimensions. Through a broad range of ethnographic terrains covering geothermal energy extraction, spiritual struggle, food sovereignty and urban hustling, he traces how his interlocutors sense, and make sense of, what remains viable under hotter conditions across socio-cultural, spiritual, metabolic, and moral registers. Rahier argues that these hotter conditions give rise to new forms of thermal consciousness that shape how people move, work, relate, and sustain the very possibility of “cooler” horizons.  

Heat Research Network

The Heat Research Network is an initiative sponsored by the Centre for Anthropological Research on Affect and Materiality (CARAM) at Ghent University under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Koen Stroeken and initiated by Dr. Nick Rahier

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