Craig Santos Perez’s Poetics of multispecies kinship: Challenging militarism and extinction in the Pacific

IF 0.3 Q2 HISTORY
Heidi Amin-Hong
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT Craig Santos Perez’s ecopoetry challenges the “rescue and recovery” narratives of species conservation embedded in processes of settler colonialism and militarism. Reading Perez’s poetry on the extinction of Guam’s avian life alongside the establishment of the Guam National Wildlife Refuge, its environmental impact testimonies, and avian conservation plans, this article develops a theory of ecological kinship that accounts for the dispersed effects of militarized occupation and foregrounds the interdependency of human and nonhuman lives in struggles for species survival and Indigenous self-determination. Furthermore, this article argues that dominant environmental discourses enable and obscure US military control over lands and waters in Guåhan. Through poetic strategies of citation and assembly, Perez portrays a Chamorro diasporic condition that incorporates the subjectivity of the Micronesian kingfisher in captivity, depicting nonhuman animals as intimate kin and active participants in Chamorro histories rather than objects in need of rescue and recovery.
克雷格·桑托斯·佩雷斯的多物种亲缘诗学:挑战军国主义与太平洋灭绝
克雷格•桑托斯•佩雷斯的生态诗歌挑战了植根于移民殖民主义和军国主义进程中的物种保护“拯救与恢复”叙事。阅读佩雷斯关于关岛鸟类灭绝的诗歌,以及关岛国家野生动物保护区的建立,其环境影响证词和鸟类保护计划,本文发展了一种生态亲属关系理论,该理论解释了军事化占领的分散影响,并强调了人类和非人类生命在物种生存和土著自决斗争中的相互依存关系。此外,本文认为,占主导地位的环境话语使美国对关岛的土地和水域的军事控制成为可能,并使其模糊不清。通过引用和集合的诗意策略,佩雷斯描绘了查莫罗人的流散状态,其中融合了密克罗尼西亚翠鸟被囚禁的主体性,将非人类动物描绘成查莫罗人历史的亲密亲属和积极参与者,而不是需要拯救和恢复的对象。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
25.00%
发文量
18
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