Unsettling extractivism: Indigeneity, race, and disruptive emplacements

IF 0.7 2区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Mareike Winchell, Cymene Howe
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Drawing inspiration from new work across the fields of political ecology, plantation and abolition studies, critical Indigenous studies, and racial capitalism, this Introduction to a special issue of The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology locates extraction within an account of property as a system of racialized exploitation. Aware of the risks of a cosmopolitics that romanticizes non-Western value systems as largely untouched by extractivism, in this Introduction and in the articles themselves, we center the question of how Indigenous communities and others navigate extractivism in places and landscapes that have been deeply impacted and partly transformed by resource mining, agrarian monoculture, and deforestation. In voicing demands not subordinated by a materialist and secular language of resource exploitation, these accounts invite a less deterministic account of “our” late capitalist present. We contend that just as extraction is not monolithic, neither are its refusals, resistances, and alternatives.

颠覆采掘主义:土著性、种族和破坏性安置
从政治生态学、种植园和废奴研究、批判性土著研究以及种族资本主义等领域的新成果中汲取灵感,《拉丁美洲和加勒比人类学杂志》特刊的这篇导言将采掘置于作为种族化剥削制度的财产论述之中。我们意识到将非西方价值体系浪漫化,认为其在很大程度上未受到采掘主义影响的世界政治学的风险,因此在本导言和文章本身中,我们将土著社区和其他社区如何在深受资源开采、单一农业和森林砍伐影响并部分改变了这些地方和景观的情况下驾驭采掘主义作为问题的中心。通过表达不从属于资源开采的物质主义和世俗语言的诉求,这些叙述为 "我们的 "晚期资本主义当下提供了一种较少决定论的解释。我们认为,正如资源开采并非铁板一块,其拒绝、抵制和替代方式也并非如此。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
7.70%
发文量
61
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