Raising justice: Political autonomy and a decolonial feminist relandscaping of Mexico City's Reforma

IF 4.7 1区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Melissa W. Wright , Carla Filipe-Narciso
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In September 2021, and in the middle Mexico City's famed boulevard, El Paseo de la Reforma, feminist and decolonial activists use ropes and ladders to ascend a stone plinth. They haul up a wooden carving of a girlish figure who thrusts her fist skyward and is painted completely in violet. They call her their “antimonument,” name her “Justicia” (Justice), and replace a massive memorial of Christopher Columbus and four Catholic friars that for over a century had represented the “glory” of Mexico's “European Discovery” within what had been known as, “The Roundabout of Columbus.” Today, Justicia stands in this same place that is now celebrated as: “The Roundabout to Women Who Fight.” As one of many antimonuments that commands attention along the country's most revered boulevard, where dozens of men known for their colonialist, slave-owning, and patriarchal sentiments have represented Mexico's national story, Justicia stands as a materialization of the embodied decolonial feminist activism that is transforming governance within Mexico and in many places across the southern Americas. In this essay, we contextualize the raising of Justicia on the Reforma within a broader discussion of the interconnected and subversive embodiments of feminist and decolonial coalitions that are remaking Mexico's commemorative spaces, both within the public imaginary as well as in the experience of tangible places. We refer to this radical remaking as “relandscaping,” a concept that we place in dialogue with feminist and decolonial geographies and feminist landscape studies. With this theoretical framing, we explore relandscaping as an example of what Cindi Katz intends with the idea of counter-topography, as solidarity that emerges at the interstices of the material and symbolic and across the interconnected scales of embodied activism. By putting together this feminist and decolonial toolkit, we show that autonomy is not merely a political act but also a landscape practice with promise for the making of innovative counter-topographies against the racist and misogynist terror within modernity's colonialist legacies.
提高正义:墨西哥城改革的政治自治和非殖民女权主义景观
2021年9月,在墨西哥城中部著名的改革大道(El Paseo de la Reforma)上,女权主义者和非殖民活动人士使用绳索和梯子登上石基。他们拖来一件木雕,上面是一个少女的形象,她的拳头向天空伸去,完全是紫色的。他们称她为“反纪念碑”,称她为“正义”(Justicia),取代了一座巨大的克里斯托弗·哥伦布(Christopher Columbus)和四位天主教修士的纪念碑,这座纪念碑一个多世纪以来一直代表着墨西哥“欧洲发现”的“荣耀”,位于被称为“哥伦布环岛”(the Roundabout of Columbus)的地方。今天,贾斯蒂西亚站在同样的地方,现在被称为:“妇女战斗的回旋处。”在这个国家最受尊敬的大道上,有许多反纪念碑引起了人们的注意,在这里,数十名以殖民主义者、奴隶主和父权主义情绪而闻名的男子代表了墨西哥的国家故事。Justicia代表了非殖民主义女权主义的具体化,这种激进主义正在改变墨西哥和南美许多地方的治理方式。在这篇文章中,我们将改革审判的提出置于更广泛的讨论中,讨论女权主义和非殖民化联盟的相互联系和颠覆性体现,这些联盟正在重塑墨西哥的纪念空间,无论是在公众想象中还是在有形场所的经验中。我们将这种激进的重塑称为“景观重建”,这是一个我们与女权主义和非殖民化地理学以及女权主义景观研究对话的概念。在这个理论框架下,我们将景观设计作为Cindi Katz意图的反地形概念的一个例子,作为在物质和象征的间隙出现的团结,并跨越具体化行动主义的相互关联的尺度。通过把这个女权主义和去殖民主义的工具包放在一起,我们表明自治不仅仅是一种政治行为,也是一种景观实践,有望在现代殖民主义遗产中制造出反对种族主义和厌女主义恐怖的创新反地形。
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
6.60
自引率
14.60%
发文量
210
期刊介绍: Political Geography is the flagship journal of political geography and research on the spatial dimensions of politics. The journal brings together leading contributions in its field, promoting international and interdisciplinary communication. Research emphases cover all scales of inquiry and diverse theories, methods, and methodologies.
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