The Exile of Juyá: Decolonial Geonarratives of Water

IF 1 Q3 GEOGRAPHY
José Quintero-Weir, Pablo Mansilla-Quiñones, Andrés Moreira-Muñoz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The anthropocene and its contemporary environmental crisis are symptomatic of an exhausted phase and space of modern rhetoric regarding a nature/culture dichotomy. Its consequences are especially evident in indigenous territories, where it imposes a hegemonic vision of nature as an object of conquest; it affects ways of being, knowing, and existing with(in) the territory, and justifies ecocide and epistemicide. Other epistemologies and geonarratives are timely needed in the transit from the anthropoce towards an imaged new epoche of conviviality between humans (indigenous and non-indigenous) and more-than human species. This work addresses that challenge from a decolonial and transdisciplinary perspective based on Wayúu indigenous knowledge and their relationship with the hydrosocial territory in the Venezuelan Guajira. Wayúu geonarratives, based on the memory of their elders, are applied to reconstruct the climate calendar and the transformations it has undergone. These geonarratives of water trace a path toward knowledge that contributes to the design of pluriverses articulated from the edges of modernity across indigenous perspectives.
《朱雅的流亡:水的非殖民化地理叙事》
人类世及其当代环境危机是关于自然/文化二分法的现代修辞的一个耗尽阶段和空间的症状。它的后果在土著地区尤其明显,在那里,它强加了一种霸权主义的观点,认为自然是征服的对象;它影响了存在、认知和与领土共存的方式,并为生态灭绝和知识灭绝辩护。在人类向人类(土著和非土著)和其他人类物种之间的欢乐的新时代过渡的过程中,及时需要其他认识论和地理叙事。这项工作基于Wayúu土著知识及其与委内瑞拉瓜希拉水文社会领土的关系,从非殖民化和跨学科的角度解决了这一挑战。Wayúu基于他们长辈的记忆的地理叙事,被用于重建气候日历及其所经历的变化。这些关于水的地理叙事追溯了一条通往知识的道路,有助于从现代性的边缘跨土著视角阐述多元世界的设计。
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
Geohumanities
Geohumanities GEOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
22
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