“人民的恢复与粮食的恢复息息相关”:粮食主权和薇诺娜·拉杜克的最后一位女性

Cristina E. Stanciu
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文以拉杜克的文学和行动主义为切入点,探讨当代美国原住民作家如何将他们的作品围绕食物主权、环境保护和经济自决等问题展开,这些问题是社区再生、更新和生存的重要平台。我认为,日本作家薇诺娜·拉杜克(Winona LaDuke)的第一部小说《最后的女人》(Last Standing Woman, 1997)在她的激进主义和政治作品的核心部分戏剧化了许多这些问题。小说《最后站立的女人》的核心是野生水稻对明尼苏达州白色土地上的奥吉布族人的重要性。在《最后的女人》中,野生水稻不仅是一种传统的可持续作物,也是一种可以确保社区生计的作物。像《最后的女人》这样的女权主义和激进主义小说——以及薇诺娜·拉杜克(Winona LaDuke)的激进主义作品,更广泛地说——的核心是一个双重挑战,这在许多美国原住民作品中引起了共鸣:一方面,是保护(现有资源、文化习俗等)的挑战;另一方面,恢复土著社区在历史上因殖民及其许多后果而遭受的损失,例如白土社区遭受的巨大土地损失。转向文学为薇诺娜·拉杜克提供了一个强有力的政治参与场所,在那里她突出了性别、部落政治和环境问题,同时她讲述了一个关于阿尼什纳贝持续恢复的强有力的故事。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“The Recovery of the People Is Tied to the Recovery of Food”: Food Sovereignty and Winona LaDuke’s Last Standing Woman
Abstract This essay turns to LaDuke’s literature and activism to explore ways in which contemporary Native American writers center their work around issues of food sovereignty, environmental protection, and economic self-determination as essential platforms for community regeneration, renewal, and survival. I argue that Last Standing Woman (1997), Anishinaabe writer Winona LaDuke’s first novel, dramatizes many of these concerns at the heart of her activist and political work. Central to the novel Last Standing Woman is the significance of wild rice for the White Earth Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) people of Minnesota. In Last Standing Woman, wild rice is not only a traditional and sustainable crop but also one that can ensure the livelihood of the community. At the heart of a feminist and activist novel like Last Standing Woman – as well as Winona LaDuke’s activist work, more broadly – is a twofold challenge, which resonates across much Native American writing: on the one hand, the challenge to preserve (existing resources, cultural practices, etc.); on the other, to recover the losses Native communities have suffered historically through colonization and its many consequences, such as the enormous loss of land suffered by the White Earth community. The turn to literature provides Winona LaDuke with a powerful site of political engagement, where she foregrounds issues of gender, tribal politics, and the environment at the same time as she tells a powerful story about Anishinaabe continued resilience.
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