Coral Cultures in the Anthropocene

Q3 Social Sciences
Joshua Schuster
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

This essay discusses how coral is becoming a kind of charismatic megafauna and a cultural icon for extinction in the Anthropocene. Until recently, most of the cultural associations around coral emphasized the strangeness and exotic qualities of coral that combines animal, mineral, and vegetable bodies. Darwin studied coral as a robust maker of atolls, while Melville wrote about coral stringing the Pacific Islands as ‘marine gardens.’ More recent theorizing on coral from Eva Hayward and Stefan Helmreich has been keen to emphasize how coral is transbiological and queer in the multi-species kinships it enables. However, in recent decades, as evidence of bleaching and mass coral die-offs have been registered by marine scientists, coral is also fast becoming a barometer for the sixth mass extinction. I look at how contemporary cultural representations of coral are straining to reconfigure the life of coral as caught between associations of fragility and resilience, seeing coral as capable of supporting indigenous island civilizations while not being able to survive ocean warming of less than one degree Celsius. I examine the work of recent artists (Courtney Mattison and Alison McDonald) whose coral-themed work combines science and spectacle. These artists return to older visions of coral figured fantastically as both living and dead, yet updating this view for today, as we find coral to be a primary figure for life and death in the Anthropocene. I finish with a discussion of the recent documentary film Chasing Coral (2017) as negotiating multiple simultaneous visual tropes and coral conditions. This film aims to provide viewers with a sense of time constraints for scientists, filmmakers, and for coral reef colonies under extreme stress in areas including the Great Barrier Reef. The film tries to articulate a pathway between scientific documentation, environmental activism, and visual drama, ultimately composing these perspectives into a work that suggests that the imbalance and overlap of these ways of engaging with coral will provide a model for how to form a global coral culture movement.
人类世的珊瑚文化
这篇文章讨论了珊瑚如何成为一种有魅力的巨型动物和人类世灭绝的文化标志。直到最近,围绕珊瑚的大多数文化协会都强调珊瑚的奇异和异国情调,它结合了动物、矿物和植物的身体。达尔文认为珊瑚是环礁的强大制造者,而梅尔维尔则把太平洋岛屿上的珊瑚写成了“海洋花园”。最近,伊娃·海沃德和斯特凡·海姆里奇对珊瑚进行了理论研究,他们一直热衷于强调珊瑚是如何跨生物的,以及它在多物种亲缘关系中是如何奇怪的。然而,近几十年来,随着海洋科学家记录到珊瑚白化和大规模死亡的证据,珊瑚也迅速成为第六次大规模灭绝的晴雨表。我观察了珊瑚的当代文化表征是如何努力重新配置珊瑚的生命的,因为它被夹在脆弱性和弹性之间,看到珊瑚能够支持土著岛屿文明,但却无法在海洋变暖不到1摄氏度的情况下生存。我研究了最近的艺术家(考特尼·马蒂森和艾莉森·麦克唐纳)的作品,他们以珊瑚为主题的作品结合了科学和景观。这些艺术家回到了古老的观点,认为珊瑚既是活的,也是死的,但今天更新了这一观点,因为我们发现珊瑚是人类世中生死的主要人物。最后,我讨论了最近的纪录片《追逐珊瑚》(2017),讨论了多种同时发生的视觉修辞和珊瑚状况。这部电影旨在为观众提供一种时间限制的感觉,科学家,电影制作人,以及大堡礁等地区极端压力下的珊瑚礁群落。这部电影试图阐明科学文献、环境行动主义和视觉戏剧之间的途径,最终将这些观点组合成一部作品,表明这些与珊瑚接触的方式的不平衡和重叠将为如何形成全球珊瑚文化运动提供一个模型。
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
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Cultural Studies Review is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication and circulation of quality thinking in cultural studies—in particular work that draws out new kinds of politics, as they emerge in diverse sites. We are interested in writing that shapes new relationships between social groups, cultural practices and forms of knowledge and which provides some account of the questions motivating its production. We welcome work from any discipline that meets these aims. Aware that new thinking in cultural studies may produce a new poetics we have a dedicated new writing section to encourage the publication of works of critical innovation, political intervention and creative textuality.
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