“Millet” as a postcolonial-masculinist sign of difference: tracing the effects of ontological-epistemic erasure on a food grain

Priya Rajalakshmi Chandrasekaran
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Abstract

ABSTRACTIn this paper, I use deconstructive theory to analyze the category of “millet” and the endangerment of food grains in India. I argue that “millet” cohered as a sign of difference from the 1960s through India’s Green Revolution, which created a national infrastructure for the materialization of colonial and masculinist ideology. In the hills of Uttarakhand and through the food grain regionally known as mandua, we see how India’s postcolonial success relied on the ontological-epistemic erasure of women’s food/land practices and assaulted the intertwined “rootedness” (place-making faculties) of women and the crops they cultivate. Reading mandua as “millet” under erasure (millet) reveals how mixed crop systems and practices of socio-ecological reciprocity eroded in the face of Green Revolution ideology and functioned as a bulwark against it. I turn finally to the counterhegemonic potential of “millet,” as Uttarakhandi seed activists link with decentralized third world networks, which are exchanging seeds and building power across and from marginalized places. This opens a potential space of visibility and belonging for Uttarakhandi women farmers in the national arena at a time when the ecological and alimentary value of “millet” has entered national and global conversations, infusing the sign of difference with new meaning.KEYWORDS: MilletUttarakhandIndiaGreen revolutiondevelopmentdeconstructionecofeminismfood grainspostcolonialmore-than-human Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Additional informationFundingThe work was supported by the American Association of University Women [Postdoctoral Research Leave Fellowship]; National Science Foundation [SBE Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant]
“小米”作为后殖民-男性主义的差异符号:追踪本体论-认知消除对粮食的影响
摘要本文运用解构主义理论对印度“小米”的范畴及粮食濒危问题进行分析。我认为,“小米”作为一种与上世纪60年代印度绿色革命不同的标志而凝聚在一起,绿色革命为殖民主义和男性主义意识形态的物化创造了一个全国性的基础设施。在北阿坎德邦(Uttarakhand)的山丘上,通过在当地被称为“曼杜瓦”(mandua)的粮食,我们看到印度后殖民时代的成功是如何依赖于对女性食物/土地实践的本体论认知的抹杀,以及对女性与她们种植的作物相互交织的“根性”(制造地方的能力)的攻击。将mandua解读为擦除(小米)下的“小米”,揭示了混合作物系统和社会生态互惠的实践在绿色革命意识形态面前是如何被侵蚀的,并起到了抵抗绿色革命的堡垒的作用。最后,我转向“小米”的反霸权潜力,因为北阿坎迪种子活动家与分散的第三世界网络联系在一起,这些网络正在交换种子,并在边缘化地区之间建立力量。当“小米”的生态和营养价值进入国家和全球对话时,这为北阿坎迪女农民在国家舞台上打开了一个潜在的可见性和归属感的空间,为差异的标志注入了新的含义。关键词:milletuttarakhand印度绿色革命发展解构主义女权主义粮食后殖民主义超过人类披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。这项工作得到了美国大学妇女协会[博士后研究休假奖学金]的支持;国家科学基金[SBE博士论文改进基金]
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