Planet Earth Strikes Back: Landscapes of Toxicity in Latin American Fiction

L. Lehnen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This essay discusses how contemporary Latin American literature (Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia) employs the discourse of toxicity—condensed in the metaphor of bio-engineering and mutation—to process and interrogate what Jason Moore has called the “Capitolecene.” Moore proposes to understand the “accumulation of capital, the pursuit of power, and the co-production of nature in dialectical unity.” This essay considers how the co-production of nature, impelled by greed (a recurring allegory of capitalism) goes terribly wrong by generating toxic biomes. As such, these texts function as ecocritical allegories of the Capitolecene (specifically in its iteration as biocapitalism) and its human and environmental consequences.
地球反击:拉丁美洲小说中的毒性景观
这篇文章讨论了当代拉丁美洲文学(阿根廷、巴西和哥伦比亚)是如何运用毒性的话语——浓缩在生物工程和突变的隐喻中——来处理和质疑杰森·摩尔所谓的“Capitolecene”。摩尔主张把“资本的积累、权力的追求和自然的共同生产辩证地统一起来”。这篇文章考虑了在贪婪(资本主义的一个反复出现的寓言)的驱使下,自然的共同生产是如何通过产生有毒的生物群落而严重出错的。因此,这些文本的功能是对Capitolecene(特别是在其作为生物资本主义的迭代中)及其人类和环境后果的生态批评寓言。
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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CiteScore
0.10
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发文量
38
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