Climate Imperialism: Ecocriticism, Postcolonialism, and Global Climate Change

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Rachel Hartnett
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Global climate change threatens to kill or displace hundreds of thousands of people and will irrevocably change the lifestyles of practically everyone on the planet. However, the effect of imperialism and colonialism on climate change is a topic that has not received adequate scrutiny. Empire has been a significant factor in the rise of fossil fuels. The complicated connections between conservation and empire often make it difficult to reconcile the two disparate fields of ecocriticism and postcolonial studies. This paper will discuss how empire and imperialism have contributed to, and continue to shape, the ever-looming threat of global climate crisis, especially as it manifests in the tropics. Global climate change reinforces disparate economic, social, and racial conditions that were started, fostered, and thrived throughout the long history of colonization, inscribing climate change as a new, slow form of imperialism that is retracing the pathways that colonialism and globalism have already formed. Ultimately, it may only be by considering climate change through a postcolonial lens and utilizing indigenous resistance that the damage of this new form of climate imperialism can be undone.
气候帝国主义:生态批评、后殖民主义与全球气候变化
全球气候变化有可能导致数十万人死亡或流离失所,并将不可逆转地改变地球上几乎每个人的生活方式。然而,帝国主义和殖民主义对气候变化的影响是一个没有得到充分审查的话题。帝国一直是化石燃料兴起的重要因素。保护和帝国之间的复杂联系往往使生态批评和后殖民研究这两个截然不同的领域难以调和。本文将讨论帝国主义和帝国主义如何促成并继续塑造日益逼近的全球气候危机威胁,尤其是在热带地区。全球气候变化强化了在漫长的殖民历史中开始、培育和繁荣的不同经济、社会和种族条件,将气候变化描述为一种新的、缓慢的帝国主义形式,它正在追溯殖民主义和全球主义已经形成的道路。最终,只有从后殖民的角度考虑气候变化,并利用本土抵抗,这种新形式的气候帝国主义的破坏才能消除。
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
eTropic
eTropic Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
审稿时长
12 weeks
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