Metabolic Rift Analysis
Metabolic rift analysis is a Marxian framework in environmental sociology that diagnoses the rupture in the material exchange, or metabolism, between human society and the rest of nature under capitalism. John Bellamy Foster's 1999 American Journal of Sociology article recovered the concept from Karl Marx, who drew on the soil chemist Justus von Liebig to describe how nineteenth-century industrial agriculture broke the nutrient cycle by shipping food and fiber from countryside to city and never returning the soil's elements. Foster argued that this 'irreparable rift in the interdependent process of social metabolism' is a classical foundation for environmental sociology rather than a modern afterthought. In The Ecological Rift (2010), Foster, Clark, and York generalized the idea to the full range of planetary boundaries, showing how the same logic of accumulation that splits town from country also displaces ecological damage across space and time. The analysis treats environmental degradation not as an accident but as a structural consequence of how production is organized for profit. It is a qualitative, historical-materialist pipeline that links political economy to biophysical flows.
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- Foster, J. B. (1999). Marx's Theory of Metabolic Rift: Classical Foundations for Environmental Sociology. American Journal of Sociology, 105(2), 366-405. · DOI 10.1086/210315
- Foster, J. B., Clark, B., & York, R. (2010). The Ecological Rift: Capitalism's War on the Earth. New York: Monthly Review Press. · ISBN 9781583672181
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