
Jason W. Moore
Environmental historian and author of Capitalism in the Web of Life, known for work on the political ecology of capitalism, cheap nature, and socio-ecological crises.
Top 3 podcasts with Jason W. Moore
Ranked by the Snipd community

9 snips
Sep 14, 2025 • 0sec
Jason W. Moore on Socialism in the Web of Life
Jason W. Moore, an environmental historian at Binghamton University, dives into the complex interplay of socialism and ecology. He critiques the nature-society divide and how it distorts historical narratives. Moore emphasizes the interconnectedness of labor and nature, arguing for alternative frameworks in socialist thought. He discusses the need for radical democratization of governance and the critical importance of unifying the working class. The conversation challenges collapse narratives and calls for crisis-oriented solutions to ecological issues, highlighting the potential for renewed social movements.

Feb 28, 2026 • 1h 32min
Do Your Own Research: Seed Oils, the CIA, and the Metabolic Shitshow w/ Jason Moore
Jason Moore, environmental historian and author, explains how capitalism made nature and labor artificially cheap. He links ultra-processed foods, seed oils, and toxic ecologies to political power and surveillance. Short, sharp takes on food systems, geopolitics of resources, and the rise of security-heavy responses to ecological breakdown.

Nov 8, 2024 • 1h 6min
Substance Fetishism or Historical Materialism With Jason W. Moore
In a compelling discussion, Jason W. Moore, a historical geographer from Binghamton University, tackles the troubling notion of 'substance fetishism' in Marxian theory. He critiques how this perspective can obscure the real issues of labor relations and environmental dynamics. Moore explores the ties between fossil fuel consumption, class dynamics, and imperialism, advocating for a more integrated approach to socioecological crises. He emphasizes the importance of cooperation in both historical socialist movements and contemporary social activism, underscoring a need for revolutionary change driven by historical materialism.


