“Fires were lit inside them”

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Elizabeth Hoover
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The language of fire has sometimes been used in illustrative ways to describe how social movements spark, flare, and sometimes sputter out. Building on recent scholarship about protest camps, as well as borrowing language from environmental historians about fire behavior, this article draws from ethnographic research to describe the pyropolitics of the Indigenous-led anti-pipeline movement at Standing Rock—examining how fire was used as analogy and in material ways to support and drive the movement to protect water from industrial capitalism. Describing ceremonial fires, social fires, home fires, cooking fires, and fires lit in protest on the front line, this article details how fire was put to work in myriad ways in order to support the movement against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), and ensure social order and physical survival at the camps built to house supporters of the movement. This article concludes with descriptions of how these sparks ignited at Standing Rock followed activists home to their own communities, to other struggles that have been taken up to resist pipelines, the contamination of water, and the appropriation of Indigenous land.
“他们内心燃起了火焰”
火的语言有时被用于说明性的方式来描述社会运动是如何火花、闪耀,有时是如何溅射的。本文以最近关于抗议营地的学术研究为基础,并借用环境历史学家关于火灾行为的语言,从人种学研究中描述了立岩(Standing rock)原住民领导的反管道运动的火焰政治,考察了火是如何被用作类比,并以物质方式支持和推动保护水免受工业资本主义侵害的运动。本文描述了仪式之火、社会之火、家庭之火、烹饪之火以及前线的抗议之火,详细描述了火如何以各种方式发挥作用,以支持反对达科他输油管道(DAPL)的运动,并确保为运动支持者建造的营地的社会秩序和人身生存。这篇文章的结尾描述了这些火花是如何在立岩镇点燃的,这些火花是如何跟随活动人士回到他们自己的社区,以及其他反抗管道、水污染和侵占原住民土地的斗争。
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
Review of International American Studies
Review of International American Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
50 weeks
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