"Swimming in Poison": Reimagining Endocrine Disruption through China's Environmental Hormones

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Janelle Lamoreaux
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

abstract:This article analyzes media responses to a 2010 Greenpeace China report titled Swimming in Poison. Among other alarming data, the report states that fish from collection points along the Yangtze River showed elevated levels of harmful "environmental hormones" (huanjing jisu), also referred to as endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs). Scholars have critiqued EDC science and activism for its heteronormative pathologizing of inter-sexuality, nonreproductive sexual activity, and impaired fertility, drawing attention to the "sex panic" at work in EDC discourse. This article shows that such sex panic is neither necessary nor universal in anxieties surrounding EDCs. Unlike media responses to EDC events in Europe and North America, Chinese news articles that followed the report did not focus on anxieties surrounding sexual transgression. Instead, media reactions focused on food safety, industrial capitalism, and the ecological scope of pollution. Based on this analysis, the author argues that the disruptive quality and analytic potential of China's environmental hormones has less to do with a defense of sexual purity or bodily integrity, and more to do with acknowledging the depths to which human and nonhuman bodies in today's China are suffused with the sometimes toxic social, economic, political, and chemical environments in which people eat, grow, and live.
“在毒药中游泳”:通过中国的环境激素重塑内分泌紊乱
本文分析了媒体对绿色和平中国2010年一份题为《毒物中游泳》的报告的反应。在其他令人担忧的数据中,该报告指出,长江沿岸收集点的鱼显示出有害的“环境激素”(也被称为内分泌干扰化学物质)水平升高。学者们批评了EDC的科学和行动主义,因为它将两性间性行为、非生殖性行为和生育能力受损的异性恋规范病态化,引起了人们对EDC话语中起作用的“性恐慌”的关注。这篇文章表明,这种性恐慌既不是必要的,也不是围绕EDCs的普遍焦虑。与欧洲和北美媒体对EDC事件的反应不同,报道之后的中国新闻文章并没有关注围绕性侵犯的焦虑。相反,媒体的反应集中在食品安全、工业资本主义和污染的生态范围上。基于这一分析,作者认为,中国环境激素的破坏性和分析潜力与捍卫性纯洁或身体完整的关系不大,而更多地与承认当今中国人类和非人类身体的深度有关,这些身体充满了有时有毒的社会、经济、政治和化学环境,人们在其中吃饭、生长和生活。
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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