Towards abolitionist agrarian geographies of Kentucky

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
Garrett Graddy-Lovelace
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Abstract

This agrarian geography of Kentucky begins on the streets of the state's largest city, in the throes of antiracist struggle. It tracks the state's lingering colonial settler power dynamics through the racism of plantation, extraction, and carceral geographies. It then traces how resistance to these exploitations take root in place-based agri-food initiatives unfolding through urban-rural solidarity against white supremacist policing, prison systems, labor exploitation, and extractivism. It begins with a brief overview of the scale of reference of Kentucky itself. Situating the state entails addressing the trauma and topophilia (love of landscape) of its agrarian past and present. It draws upon bell hooks’ literary invocations of Kentucky-based agrarian visions, as well as place-based political ecology scholarship (seven years of Kentucky Agrarian Questions practitioner panels at the Dimensions of Political Ecology Conference at University of Kentucky). Following Black and abolitionist geographies, this agrarian geography traces rural and urban shared struggles for food sovereignty, environmental justice, and liberation from racism of carceral systems. It introduces Kentucky grassroots projects connecting and uniting rural and urban struggles against carceral violence and the racism therein, such as Hood to the Holler (a political initiative emerging from Black Lives Matter mobilizations for Breonna Taylor). The essay ends with reflections on the political-ecological contradictions and imperative of working through and beyond a settler-colonial-state scale of reference like Kentucky. To extricate from and dismantle plantation modes and carceral legacies, abolitionist agrarian geographies recover the reality of Black and Indigenous agrarian history, presence, and futures. As such, rooted in place-based reckoning, resistance, and responsibility, they offer hope.
走向肯塔基州的废奴主义农业地理
在反种族主义斗争的阵痛中,肯塔基州的农业地理从该州最大城市的街道上开始。它通过种植园、采掘和殖民地地理上的种族主义,追踪了该州挥之不去的殖民定居者权力动态。然后,它追溯了对这些剥削的抵制是如何在基于地方的农业食品倡议中扎根的,这些倡议通过城乡团结来反对白人至上主义的警察、监狱系统、劳动剥削和采掘主义。首先是对肯塔基州自身参照系的简要概述。定位国家需要解决其农业过去和现在的创伤和地形癖(对景观的热爱)。它借鉴了bell hooks对肯塔基农业愿景的文学召唤,以及基于地方的政治生态学奖学金(肯塔基大学政治生态学维度会议上七年的肯塔基农业问题实践者小组)。在黑人和废奴主义地理学之后,这个农业地理学追溯了农村和城市共同为粮食主权、环境正义和从种族主义和奴隶制中解放出来的斗争。它介绍了肯塔基州的基层项目,将农村和城市的斗争联系起来,团结起来,反对黑人暴力和其中的种族主义,比如“从胡德到霍勒”(黑人的命也重要,这是布雷欧娜·泰勒动员的政治倡议)。文章最后反思了政治-生态的矛盾,以及穿越和超越像肯塔基州这样的定居者-殖民地-州的参考尺度的必要性。为了摆脱和拆除种植园模式和奴隶制遗产,废奴主义农业地理学恢复了黑人和土著农业历史、存在和未来的现实。因此,根植于基于地点的清算、抵抗和责任,它们提供了希望。
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
6.00
自引率
13.80%
发文量
101
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