魔力与幽灵:委内瑞拉马拉开波湖的石油媒体

M. Zazzarino
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摘要

来自全球北方的能源人文学科经常通过对着迷和祛魅的线性叙述来提出石油撤资的问题。根据这种说法,现代人类毫无疑问地享受着石油带来的好处,只有在感受到气候变化的影响之后,人们才会从石油的诱惑中醒悟过来。本文试图通过关注委内瑞拉石油开采中心——马拉开波湖的调解,使这一叙述复杂化。通过对标准石油公司的《El Farol》(1935 - 1975)和独立纪录片《Pozo Muerto》(1968)的文本和视觉分析,本文表明,在石油开发被视为周期性的、破坏性的过程而不是一个完成的过程的地区,持久的魔法、令人眼花缭乱和迷人的语言并不是理解复杂景观的唯一可用记录。受María皮拉尔·布兰科(Pilar Blanco)的鬼魂观影(2012)概念的启发,并关注当地的视觉实践,我认为从马拉开波湖等采掘地的角度来看,鬼魂的语言更适合解释岩石文化的生活体验。与魔法记录不同的是,魔法记录将石油作为一种变革性的媒介,以极快的速度将地下土壤转化为财富,而幽灵记录有效地记录了委内瑞拉石油文化经历中充满的剥夺、中断和不确定性的历史。最后,我主张一种观点,即审视将石油构建为一种神奇的中介的劳动,同时承认理解岩石文化的其他记录。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Magic and Haunting: Oil Media at Venezuela’s Lake Maracaibo
Energy humanities emanating from the Global North often presents questions of oil disinvestment through a linear narrative of enchantment and disenchantment. According to this narrative, modern humankind has enjoyed the benefits of oil without much question, and it is only after the effects of climate change are felt that one arrives at a moment of disenchantment from oil’s allure. This article seeks to complicate this narrative by focusing on mediations of Venezuela’s oil extraction epicenter: Lake Maracaibo. Through textual and visual analysis of Standard Oil’s El Farol (1935–75) and the independent documentary film Pozo Muerto (1968), the article suggests that the persistent language of magic, bedazzlement, and enchantment is not the only register available to understand complex landscapes in regions where oil development is perceived as a cyclical, disruptive process rather than as a finished one. Inspired by María Pilar Blanco’s notion of ghost-watching (2012) and paying attention to local visual practices, I suggest that a language of haunting is better suited to explain the lived experience of petroculture from the perspective of extraction enclaves such as Lake Maracaibo. Unlike the register of magic, which presents oil as a transformative agent that converts the subsoil into wealth at great speed, a register of haunting effectively registers the histories of dispossession, interruption, and uncertainty that permeate the experience of petroculture in Venezuela. Ultimately, I argue for a perspective that examines the labor of constructing oil as a miraculous mediator while acknowledging alternative registers to understand petrocultures.
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