{"title":"人类世的植物尺度:深绿色","authors":"Heather I. Sullivan","doi":"10.37536/ecozona.2020.11.2.3480","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"When exploring the problem of delineating possible “scales” useful to describe the Anthropocene’s ecological changes, I suggest plant-human relations as the basis of our models rather than solely Human impact with a capital “H” as if a stand-alone species. Instead, human beings are a species within the photosynthesis-shaped, oxygen-infused atmosphere, and countering the ongoing industrial ecocide means seeking multispecies justice. One may claim that the “vegetal” stands as the ontological antithesis of being “animal,” but that view expresses a one-dimensional disregard for the essential work and bodies of plants and their fellow photosynthesizers that produce oxygen, drive the carbon cycle, feed terrestrial life, and influence water cycles. Indeed, “animal” is an emergence from the vegetal context. But our plant stories are shifting with the anthropocenic inflection. This dark green project explores narratives, both scientific and creative, of plant-human interactions in time of planetary change; and these interactions are not always peaceful or on an easily comprehended scale. As an example, I consider the 2015 short science-fiction story from Alan Dean Foster, “That Creeping Sensation,” that portrays how plant-human relations take on frightening new forms in a climate-changed world altered by heat, carbon dioxide, and the not-alwayssupportive activities of plants. With all the heat and carbon dioxide, plant life explodes and produces a massive increase in oxygen. In response, insects grow enormous and specialized first-responders must battle the bugs. Foster’s texts portray scales of non-human agency larger than the human whose power encompasses, enables, and sometimes threatens human life. His “cli fi” tale of giant bugs presents human beings as inextricably enmeshed in a plant-dominated existence. To paraphrase Derrida, there is no outside the vegetal.","PeriodicalId":222311,"journal":{"name":"European journal of literature, culture and the environment","volume":"5 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-09-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Vegetal Scale in the Anthropocene: The Dark Green\",\"authors\":\"Heather I. Sullivan\",\"doi\":\"10.37536/ecozona.2020.11.2.3480\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"When exploring the problem of delineating possible “scales” useful to describe the Anthropocene’s ecological changes, I suggest plant-human relations as the basis of our models rather than solely Human impact with a capital “H” as if a stand-alone species. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在探索描绘可能有助于描述人类世生态变化的“尺度”的问题时,我建议将植物与人类的关系作为我们模型的基础,而不是仅仅把人类的影响当作一个独立的物种。相反,人类是光合作用形成的、充满氧气的大气中的一个物种,对抗正在进行的工业生态灭绝意味着寻求多物种正义。有人可能会声称,“植物”是“动物”的本体论对立面,但这种观点表达了对植物及其光合作用伙伴的基本工作和身体的一维漠视,这些光合作用产生氧气,驱动碳循环,为陆地生命提供食物,并影响水循环。事实上,“动物”是从植物的背景中出现的。但我们的植物故事正在随着人类活动的变化而改变。这个深绿色的项目探索了地球变化时期植物与人类相互作用的科学和创造性叙事;这些互动并不总是和平的,也不总是容易理解的。举个例子,我想到了艾伦·迪恩·福斯特(Alan Dean Foster) 2015年的短篇科幻小说《爬行的感觉》(That creepsensation),它描绘了在一个气候变化的世界里,植物与人类的关系是如何以可怕的新形式出现的,这个世界被高温、二氧化碳和植物不总是支持性的活动所改变。随着所有的热量和二氧化碳,植物生命爆炸并产生大量的氧气。作为回应,昆虫长得巨大,专门的急救人员必须与昆虫作斗争。福斯特的文本描绘了一种比人类更大的非人类力量,它的力量包含、支持、有时威胁着人类的生命。他关于巨型昆虫的“科幻”故事将人类不可避免地卷入了以植物为主导的生存中。套用德里达的话,在植物之外没有任何东西。
When exploring the problem of delineating possible “scales” useful to describe the Anthropocene’s ecological changes, I suggest plant-human relations as the basis of our models rather than solely Human impact with a capital “H” as if a stand-alone species. Instead, human beings are a species within the photosynthesis-shaped, oxygen-infused atmosphere, and countering the ongoing industrial ecocide means seeking multispecies justice. One may claim that the “vegetal” stands as the ontological antithesis of being “animal,” but that view expresses a one-dimensional disregard for the essential work and bodies of plants and their fellow photosynthesizers that produce oxygen, drive the carbon cycle, feed terrestrial life, and influence water cycles. Indeed, “animal” is an emergence from the vegetal context. But our plant stories are shifting with the anthropocenic inflection. This dark green project explores narratives, both scientific and creative, of plant-human interactions in time of planetary change; and these interactions are not always peaceful or on an easily comprehended scale. As an example, I consider the 2015 short science-fiction story from Alan Dean Foster, “That Creeping Sensation,” that portrays how plant-human relations take on frightening new forms in a climate-changed world altered by heat, carbon dioxide, and the not-alwayssupportive activities of plants. With all the heat and carbon dioxide, plant life explodes and produces a massive increase in oxygen. In response, insects grow enormous and specialized first-responders must battle the bugs. Foster’s texts portray scales of non-human agency larger than the human whose power encompasses, enables, and sometimes threatens human life. His “cli fi” tale of giant bugs presents human beings as inextricably enmeshed in a plant-dominated existence. To paraphrase Derrida, there is no outside the vegetal.