Swim your ground: Towards a black and blue humanities

IF 0.3 Q2 HISTORY
Jonathan Howard
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This essay engages with the prevailing metaphor in our talk about ecological crisis: humanity’s carbon “footprint.” As a fitting place to begin thinking about humanity's excessive footprint and dominating interface with the planet, I suggest humanity’s first large-scale encounter with the deep sea during the transatlantic age of exploration and colonization. Or the opportunity our species had to learn that an earthling is hardly the sort of creature whose interface with a mostly blue planet can be rightly typified as a standing. Critiquing the global rise of what I call the “stand your ground subject,” I suggest the drowned Africans remembered in Olaudah Equiano’s narrative as the “inhabitants of the deep,” as a more promising place for the humanities to begin, in Alice Walker’s words, to “reclaim a proper relationship to the world” through an oceanic recalibration of the human.
游向你的土地:走向黑色和蓝色的人文学科
本文涉及我们在谈论生态危机时常用的比喻:人类的碳“足迹”。作为开始思考人类过度的足迹和对地球的主导作用的合适地点,我建议人类在跨大西洋探险和殖民时代第一次大规模接触深海。或者我们的物种有机会认识到,地球人几乎不是那种与一个几乎是蓝色的星球接触的生物,可以被正确地代表为一种站立。批评我所谓的“坚持你的立场主题”的全球崛起,我建议在奥拉达·伊奎亚诺的叙述中,被淹死的非洲人被称为“深海居民”,作为人文学科开始的更有希望的地方,用爱丽丝·沃克的话说,通过人类的海洋重新校准,“重新建立与世界的适当关系”。
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
0.60
自引率
25.00%
发文量
18
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