Working Nature: A History of the Energy Economy

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    Daniela Russ

    Publisher: Verso

    Year: 2026

    Format: Paperback

    Size: 241 pages

    ISBN: 9781804298978

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A CRITICAL HISTORY OF ENERGY

Daniela Russ argues that the category of ‘energy’ is best understood not in terms of particular material things but as a social relation to nature forged over 200 years of capitalist industrialization. Working Nature examines how engineers, scientists, and economists harnessed and circulated the products of nature despite social and natural resistance.

About the Author

Daniela Russ is a historical sociologist based at the Global and European Studies Institute of the University of Leipzig, Germany. Her research explores the history of the energy economy in a global perspective, the conflicts around the decarbonization of the electric grid, and the theory and practice of Soviet energy planning. Her work has been published by outlets such as Contemporary European History, Historical Materialism, and Stanford University Press.

What People Are Saying

"What do we talk about when we talk about energy? We do so all the time, but rarely does anyone bother to open this black box that fuels everything. In Working Nature, Daniela Russ makes the most classical critical move – stripping something of its presumed naturalness – and demonstrates that ‘energy’ is a regiment imposed on nature through myriad acts over the past centuries. No lump of coal ever jumped into the capitalist furnace of its own volition. Nature has been dragged into the fire, and not without resistance. Consistently brilliant and illuminating, Working Nature announces the arrival of a major new voice on the scene of ecological Marxism." Andreas Malm, co-author of The Long Heat

"In this brilliant book, Russ proposes that energy has a history: not just the history of a human idea, nor the simple materialist history of increasing exploitation of nature. Under capitalist industrialization, energy came into being as something new in the world, forming a novel arrangement of both natural things and human bodies. This “energetic economy” has served as both a misrecognized mode of domination and an unrealized promise of freedom." Timothy Mitchell, author of The Alibi of Capital

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