致 SJTG 和皇家地理学会(与 IBG)的公开信:加沙战争、皇家地理学会(与 IBG 合作)和巴勒斯坦文学活动

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Mark Griffiths, Sarah Hughes, Olivia Mason, Aya Nassar, Nicole Printy Currie
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We encourage submissions…that advance these agendas.’ (Sidaway <i>et al</i>., <span>2021</span>: 6) we hope that the <i>SJTG</i> will publish this open letter, as a public and permanent record.</p>\n<p>During the first week of Israel's war on Gaza, the Royal Geographical Society (RGS-IBG) took the decision to cancel its hosting of a Palestinian literary event. ‘Nakba – A Century of Resistance and Solidarity’ had been due to take place on 27 October 2023 as part of the 10th edition of Palfest, an annual event that celebrates Palestinian culture and ‘the creation of language and ideas for combating colonialism in the 21st century’. Thankfully, Palfest organizers were able to find an alternative venue at short notice, but the Society's decision has not gone unnoticed. It came at a time when calls for an end to Israeli occupation (or even for a ceasefire) faced censorship in many corners of academia<sup>1</sup> and official political discourses in the UK, where the RGS-IBG is based, were skewed such that to stand with Israel has become the terrifying norm, at whatever cost to Palestinians. It was in this context, on 13 October, as Israel's war crimes in Gaza were evident (including censure from the United Nations Secretary General), that the RGS-IBG informed PalFest that this was not the time to talk about Palestine. The Society refused to host the event.</p>\n<p>The geographical community responded with critical force. Following discussions on social media and a list serve (the critical geography forum, which is archived at crit-geog-forum@jiscmail.ac.uk), and a letter to the Society bearing nearly 500 signatures, an official response came. The RGS-IBG issued a press statement on 27 October; the decision was not taken ‘lightly or hastily’ but was based on an assessment of risk. The statement did not, we note, use the word ‘Palestine’ once. In a subsequent videocall with the RGS-IBG, we were left unconvinced by the account of the cancellation as one based on risk, especially as the Society has the experience to receive all kinds of high-profile audiences at Lowther Lodge in Kensington. If the security detail of a royal visitor can be accommodated, then why not a discussion about literature and Palestine? Why is one of our most important professional bodies marginalizing a colonized population? These are questions at the centre of a letter we co-authored that was signed by almost 500 members of the geography community and delivered to the Society on 7 November. We took it as a sign of productive engagement that the RGS responded just two days later with a letter that apologized for not either moving the event online or making it invitation-only. The response also expressed a commitment ‘to convene an open forum which will give space and time for dialogue … with geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict, as well as to hear directly from UK-based geographers from Palestine and Israel’. Both our original letter with a list of signatories and the RGS response are included below as a form of permanent public record.</p>\n<p>We publish the exchange here with this open letter because the RGS, while it did agree to publish the texts, did so in a way that (in our view) detracts from the issue. It is not insignificant detail that the letters were appended to the bottom of the page of an already-dated link in PDF form that requires download. Why is this topic not deemed important enough for a new URL? Why was the text not formatted in HTML, as is customary for RGS-IBG press statements and news items? Why didn’t RGS-IBG media feeds share the exchange? And why, very importantly, is the concern of 500 geographers downplayed as ‘some members of the geographical community worked together to compose a letter’? As we made clear in our latest email to the RGS Director: ‘this is precisely how to go about making sure information reaches as few people as possible’. Such a strategy signals a refusal to take the specific issue seriously and maintains a certain geographical tradition that many have challenged in recent years.</p>\n<p>The Society has a long colonial history that it has never fully committed to address. Its colonial beginnings are well-documented (Driver, <span>2001</span>), as are its connected histories of complicity with militarism (Heffernan, <span>1996</span>) and extractive capital (Gbadegesin, <span>1999</span>; Gilbert <i>et al</i>., <span>1999</span>). The Society played an integral role in Britain's ‘Empire of Science’, providing the intellectual justifications and expertise for exploitation overseas. In the formative years of British and Zionist colonization, for example, Society Fellows worked with the Royal Air Force to produce reconnaissance maps of Palestine (Hamshaw Thomas, <span>1920</span>), and grappled with telling questions of the day: ‘is Palestine a land suited for the peoples from the temperate climes to colonise?’ (Masterman, <span>1917</span>: 16); could it be ‘restored to prosperity by a civilised Government’? (Bryce <i>et al</i>., <span>1917</span>: 28). The RGS, it should not be forgotten, was established partly as a successor of the Palestine Association (est. 1805) that sought to bring the Holy Land into the knowledge spaces of British Empire (Kark &amp; Goren, <span>2011</span>). This material and epistemic colonial relationship with Palestine and the Middle East has been critiqued as a ‘parasitical’ for the ways that benefits accrue to Western institutions and academics while local knowledges and ethical stances are dismissed or diminished.<sup>2</sup> We should recall the long-established critiques of such colonial geographies (e.g., Noxolo <i>et al</i>., <span>2012</span>; Jazeel, <span>2014</span>) as well as calls to carefully refigure relations between geography and the ‘Middle East’ (Mills &amp; Hammond, <span>2016</span>; Sidaway, <span>2023</span>). Events such as PalFest promise to deliver a more ethical relationship in this respect and thus should be welcomed by geographers.</p>\n<p>As the letter to the RGS demonstrated, such events are in fact welcomed by geographers (almost 500 of them). This is not in itself notable. What is notable and a source of real concern is that such an event was cancelled by the Society that represents geography and geographers in the UK. <i>We are the geographical society</i>. What is a representative body if not representative of its members? The RGS-IBG must effect the change that geographers call for—and have called for over many years. Some progress has been made in terms of the (belated) moves to recognize women's roles in the RGS 100+ initiative in 2013 (see also Bell &amp; McEwan, <span>1996</span>); a tentative (and contested) decolonizing agenda (Radcliffe, <span>2017</span>; c/f Esson <i>et al</i>., <span>2017</span>); and productive student engagement (Jazeel <i>et al</i>., <span>2022</span>) with critique of colonialists in the RGS Collection (Driver, <span>2013</span>; Griffiths &amp; Baker, <span>2019</span>). But the de-platforming of Palestinian voices returns to the Society's roots. It is not for us—merely five geographers among many—to set a tone for debate but it is too obvious a point to ignore that the proposal to convene ‘geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict’ in an ‘open forum’ is wide of any remedial mark. The Society thereby mistakenly assumes that Palestine or Palestinian culture, history and art cannot be discussed in and of itself but should be framed and located in relation to Israel and conflict. It substitutes a Palestinian-led forum on expulsion and exile for one of false symmetry or balance—a ‘conflict’ but <i>never</i> a regime of military occupation, settler colonialism, or apartheid. We are surely, at this point, in any estimation, beyond fuelling the idea that this is a ‘conflict’.</p>\n<p>If our inboxes are anything to go by, this is not a closed matter. Many intend to (or have already) re-consider engagement with the Society by cancelling memberships and fellowships, withdrawing from speaking events and roles in affiliated research groups and journals. We are not involved in co-ordinating such actions and so cannot speak to their multiple (and potentially serious) consequences, but we would like to emphasize one that has been recurrent in our communications with colleagues across the discipline. For many student members, and especially those of marginalized backgrounds (including many on study/work visas), what does the de-platforming say to them? As they familiarize themselves with geography and geographical institutions, can they identify with this version of the Society? One whose reflex is to shut down the discussions that are at the heart of contemporary spatial struggles. The Society seems to forget that geographers are committed to justice, to speaking truth to power, to interrogating colonialism and colonial legacies. These weeks are spent on petitions, teach-ins, lobbying MPs, media appearances, and the important work of supporting family, friends, and colleagues through this terrible attack on Palestinians in Gaza and across Palestine. As we contest a largely right-wing, belligerent, and colonial media and political mindset, it is extremely dispiriting to have to turn our critical energies to confront our own professional society. We present the letters here for permanent public record and renew the call for the RGS-IBG to take meaningful remedial action.</p>","PeriodicalId":47000,"journal":{"name":"Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-01-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"An open letter to the SJTG and the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG): The War on Gaza, the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), and a Palestinian literary event\",\"authors\":\"Mark Griffiths, Sarah Hughes, Olivia Mason, Aya Nassar, Nicole Printy Currie\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/sjtg.12527\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Mindful that the <i>Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography</i> (SJTG) has previously declared that ‘the <i>SJTG</i> hopes to publish more scholarship on the past, present and future geographies of decolonization and the decolonization of geography. We encourage submissions…that advance these agendas.’ (Sidaway <i>et al</i>., <span>2021</span>: 6) we hope that the <i>SJTG</i> will publish this open letter, as a public and permanent record.</p>\\n<p>During the first week of Israel's war on Gaza, the Royal Geographical Society (RGS-IBG) took the decision to cancel its hosting of a Palestinian literary event. ‘Nakba – A Century of Resistance and Solidarity’ had been due to take place on 27 October 2023 as part of the 10th edition of Palfest, an annual event that celebrates Palestinian culture and ‘the creation of language and ideas for combating colonialism in the 21st century’. Thankfully, Palfest organizers were able to find an alternative venue at short notice, but the Society's decision has not gone unnoticed. It came at a time when calls for an end to Israeli occupation (or even for a ceasefire) faced censorship in many corners of academia<sup>1</sup> and official political discourses in the UK, where the RGS-IBG is based, were skewed such that to stand with Israel has become the terrifying norm, at whatever cost to Palestinians. It was in this context, on 13 October, as Israel's war crimes in Gaza were evident (including censure from the United Nations Secretary General), that the RGS-IBG informed PalFest that this was not the time to talk about Palestine. The Society refused to host the event.</p>\\n<p>The geographical community responded with critical force. Following discussions on social media and a list serve (the critical geography forum, which is archived at crit-geog-forum@jiscmail.ac.uk), and a letter to the Society bearing nearly 500 signatures, an official response came. The RGS-IBG issued a press statement on 27 October; the decision was not taken ‘lightly or hastily’ but was based on an assessment of risk. The statement did not, we note, use the word ‘Palestine’ once. In a subsequent videocall with the RGS-IBG, we were left unconvinced by the account of the cancellation as one based on risk, especially as the Society has the experience to receive all kinds of high-profile audiences at Lowther Lodge in Kensington. If the security detail of a royal visitor can be accommodated, then why not a discussion about literature and Palestine? Why is one of our most important professional bodies marginalizing a colonized population? These are questions at the centre of a letter we co-authored that was signed by almost 500 members of the geography community and delivered to the Society on 7 November. We took it as a sign of productive engagement that the RGS responded just two days later with a letter that apologized for not either moving the event online or making it invitation-only. The response also expressed a commitment ‘to convene an open forum which will give space and time for dialogue … with geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict, as well as to hear directly from UK-based geographers from Palestine and Israel’. Both our original letter with a list of signatories and the RGS response are included below as a form of permanent public record.</p>\\n<p>We publish the exchange here with this open letter because the RGS, while it did agree to publish the texts, did so in a way that (in our view) detracts from the issue. It is not insignificant detail that the letters were appended to the bottom of the page of an already-dated link in PDF form that requires download. Why is this topic not deemed important enough for a new URL? Why was the text not formatted in HTML, as is customary for RGS-IBG press statements and news items? Why didn’t RGS-IBG media feeds share the exchange? And why, very importantly, is the concern of 500 geographers downplayed as ‘some members of the geographical community worked together to compose a letter’? As we made clear in our latest email to the RGS Director: ‘this is precisely how to go about making sure information reaches as few people as possible’. Such a strategy signals a refusal to take the specific issue seriously and maintains a certain geographical tradition that many have challenged in recent years.</p>\\n<p>The Society has a long colonial history that it has never fully committed to address. Its colonial beginnings are well-documented (Driver, <span>2001</span>), as are its connected histories of complicity with militarism (Heffernan, <span>1996</span>) and extractive capital (Gbadegesin, <span>1999</span>; Gilbert <i>et al</i>., <span>1999</span>). The Society played an integral role in Britain's ‘Empire of Science’, providing the intellectual justifications and expertise for exploitation overseas. In the formative years of British and Zionist colonization, for example, Society Fellows worked with the Royal Air Force to produce reconnaissance maps of Palestine (Hamshaw Thomas, <span>1920</span>), and grappled with telling questions of the day: ‘is Palestine a land suited for the peoples from the temperate climes to colonise?’ (Masterman, <span>1917</span>: 16); could it be ‘restored to prosperity by a civilised Government’? (Bryce <i>et al</i>., <span>1917</span>: 28). The RGS, it should not be forgotten, was established partly as a successor of the Palestine Association (est. 1805) that sought to bring the Holy Land into the knowledge spaces of British Empire (Kark &amp; Goren, <span>2011</span>). This material and epistemic colonial relationship with Palestine and the Middle East has been critiqued as a ‘parasitical’ for the ways that benefits accrue to Western institutions and academics while local knowledges and ethical stances are dismissed or diminished.<sup>2</sup> We should recall the long-established critiques of such colonial geographies (e.g., Noxolo <i>et al</i>., <span>2012</span>; Jazeel, <span>2014</span>) as well as calls to carefully refigure relations between geography and the ‘Middle East’ (Mills &amp; Hammond, <span>2016</span>; Sidaway, <span>2023</span>). Events such as PalFest promise to deliver a more ethical relationship in this respect and thus should be welcomed by geographers.</p>\\n<p>As the letter to the RGS demonstrated, such events are in fact welcomed by geographers (almost 500 of them). This is not in itself notable. What is notable and a source of real concern is that such an event was cancelled by the Society that represents geography and geographers in the UK. <i>We are the geographical society</i>. What is a representative body if not representative of its members? The RGS-IBG must effect the change that geographers call for—and have called for over many years. Some progress has been made in terms of the (belated) moves to recognize women's roles in the RGS 100+ initiative in 2013 (see also Bell &amp; McEwan, <span>1996</span>); a tentative (and contested) decolonizing agenda (Radcliffe, <span>2017</span>; c/f Esson <i>et al</i>., <span>2017</span>); and productive student engagement (Jazeel <i>et al</i>., <span>2022</span>) with critique of colonialists in the RGS Collection (Driver, <span>2013</span>; Griffiths &amp; Baker, <span>2019</span>). But the de-platforming of Palestinian voices returns to the Society's roots. It is not for us—merely five geographers among many—to set a tone for debate but it is too obvious a point to ignore that the proposal to convene ‘geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict’ in an ‘open forum’ is wide of any remedial mark. The Society thereby mistakenly assumes that Palestine or Palestinian culture, history and art cannot be discussed in and of itself but should be framed and located in relation to Israel and conflict. It substitutes a Palestinian-led forum on expulsion and exile for one of false symmetry or balance—a ‘conflict’ but <i>never</i> a regime of military occupation, settler colonialism, or apartheid. We are surely, at this point, in any estimation, beyond fuelling the idea that this is a ‘conflict’.</p>\\n<p>If our inboxes are anything to go by, this is not a closed matter. Many intend to (or have already) re-consider engagement with the Society by cancelling memberships and fellowships, withdrawing from speaking events and roles in affiliated research groups and journals. We are not involved in co-ordinating such actions and so cannot speak to their multiple (and potentially serious) consequences, but we would like to emphasize one that has been recurrent in our communications with colleagues across the discipline. For many student members, and especially those of marginalized backgrounds (including many on study/work visas), what does the de-platforming say to them? As they familiarize themselves with geography and geographical institutions, can they identify with this version of the Society? One whose reflex is to shut down the discussions that are at the heart of contemporary spatial struggles. The Society seems to forget that geographers are committed to justice, to speaking truth to power, to interrogating colonialism and colonial legacies. These weeks are spent on petitions, teach-ins, lobbying MPs, media appearances, and the important work of supporting family, friends, and colleagues through this terrible attack on Palestinians in Gaza and across Palestine. As we contest a largely right-wing, belligerent, and colonial media and political mindset, it is extremely dispiriting to have to turn our critical energies to confront our own professional society. We present the letters here for permanent public record and renew the call for the RGS-IBG to take meaningful remedial action.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":47000,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography\",\"volume\":\"1 1\",\"pages\":\"\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.2000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-01-19\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"90\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1111/sjtg.12527\",\"RegionNum\":3,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"GEOGRAPHY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1111/sjtg.12527","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"GEOGRAPHY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

铭记《新加坡热带地理学报》(SJTG)曾宣布 "SJTG 希望发表更多关于过去、现在和未来的非殖民化地理学以及地理学非殖民化的学术成果。我们鼓励......推进这些议程的投稿"(Sidaway et al.(在以色列对加沙发动战争的第一周,英国皇家地理学会(RGS-IBG)决定取消主办巴勒斯坦文学活动。大灾难--一个世纪的抵抗与团结 "原定于 2023 年 10 月 27 日举行,是第十届 Palfest 活动的一部分。值得庆幸的是,Palfest 的组织者在短时间内找到了替代地点,但协会的决定并没有引起人们的注意。当时,要求结束以色列占领(甚至停火)的呼声在学术界的许多角落都面临着审查1 ,而 RGS-IBG 所在的英国的官方政治言论也出现了偏差,与以色列站在一起已成为一种可怕的准则,无论巴勒斯坦人付出什么代价。正是在这种背景下,10 月 13 日,当以色列在加沙的战争罪行显而易见时(包括受到联合国秘书长的谴责),英国皇家地质学会-国际基础科学协会通知 PalFest,现在不是谈论巴勒斯坦问题的时候。该协会拒绝主办此次活动。在社交媒体和列表服务(关键地理论坛,存档于 crit-geog-forum@jiscmail.ac.uk)上进行讨论,并向该学会发出一封有近 500 人签名的信函之后,该学会做出了正式回应。英国皇家地理学会-国际地理学会于 10 月 27 日发表了一份新闻声明;该决定并非 "轻率或草率 "做出,而是基于对风险的评估。我们注意到,声明中一次也没有使用 "巴勒斯坦 "一词。在随后与英国皇家地质学会-国际地质学家协会的视频通话中,我们对该协会将取消活动说成是基于风险的说法并不信服,尤其是该协会拥有在肯辛顿的洛瑟山庄接待各种高规格观众的经验。如果皇室访客的安保细节都能满足,那么为什么关于文学和巴勒斯坦的讨论就不能呢?为什么我们最重要的专业机构之一会将殖民地人民边缘化?这些都是我们共同撰写的一封信的核心问题,这封信由地理学界近 500 名成员签名,并于 11 月 7 日递交给了学会。两天后,英国皇家地理学会回信,对没有将活动转移到网上或仅限邀请函参加表示歉意,我们认为这是一次富有成效的参与。回信中还承诺 "将召开一次公开论坛,为从事巴勒斯坦、以色列和冲突问题研究的地理学家......提供对话的空间和时间,并直接听取来自巴勒斯坦和以色列的英国地理学家的意见"。我们在此发表这封公开信的同时也发表了双方的交流,因为英国地理学家协会虽然同意发表这些文字,但发表的方式(在我们看来)有损于问题的严肃性。这些信件被附在一个已经过期的 PDF 格式链接的页面底部,需要下载,这不是一个无关紧要的细节。为什么这个主题没有被认为重要到需要一个新的 URL?为什么不按照 RGS-IBG 新闻声明和新闻项目的惯例,用 HTML 格式编写文本?为什么 RGS-IBG 媒体没有分享交流内容?更重要的是,为什么 500 名地理学家的关注被淡化为 "地理学界的一些成员共同撰写了一封信"?正如我们在给英国地理学会会长的最新电子邮件中明确指出的那样:"这正是确保信息尽可能少地到达少数人手中的方法"。这种策略意味着拒绝认真对待这个具体问题,并保持了某种地理传统,而近年来许多人都对这种传统提出了质疑。它的殖民历史渊源有据可查(Driver,2001 年),它与军国主义(Hffernan,1996 年)和采掘资本(Gbadegesin,1999 年;Gilbert 等人,1999 年)的共谋历史也是如此。该学会在英国的 "科学帝国 "中扮演了不可或缺的角色,为海外剥削提供了知识理由和专业知识。 例如,在英国和犹太复国主义殖民的萌芽时期,协会会员与英国皇家空军合作,绘制了巴勒斯坦的侦察地图(Hamshaw Thomas,1920 年),并努力解决当时的重要问题:"巴勒斯坦是一块适合来自温带地区的人民殖民的土地吗?(布莱斯等人,1917 年:28)。不应忘记的是,英国皇家地质调查局的成立部分是为了继承巴勒斯坦协会(成立于 1805 年),该协会试图将圣地纳入大英帝国的知识空间(Kark &amp; Goren, 2011)。与巴勒斯坦和中东的这种物质和认识上的殖民关系被批判为 "寄生虫",因为西方机构和学术界从中获益,而当地的知识和伦理立场却被否定或削弱。我们应回顾对此类殖民地理学的长期批判(例如,Noxolo 等人,2012 年;Jazeel,2014 年),以及仔细重构地理学与 "中东 "之间关系的呼吁(Mills &amp; Hammond, 2016; Sidaway, 2023 年)。正如致英国皇家地理学会的信函所显示的,此类活动事实上受到了地理学家(近 500 人)的欢迎。这本身并不值得一提。值得注意和担忧的是,代表英国地理学和地理学家的学会取消了此类活动。我们是地理学会。如果不能代表其成员,那还算什么代表机构?英国地理学会必须实现地理学家们多年来一直呼吁的变革。在以下方面已经取得了一些进展:在2013年的 "皇家地理学会100+"(RGS 100+)倡议中承认妇女的作用(姗姗来迟)(另见Bell &amp; McEwan, 1996);一个试探性的(和有争议的)非殖民化议程(Radcliffe, 2017; c/f Esson等人, 2017);以及富有成效的学生参与(Jazeel等人, 2022),在《皇家地理学会文集》中对殖民主义者进行批判(Driver, 2013; Griffiths &amp; Baker, 2019)。但是,巴勒斯坦声音的去平台化又回到了协会的根源。我们--仅仅是众多地理学家中的五位--无法为辩论定下基调,但一个不容忽视的事实是,在一个 "开放论坛 "上召集 "研究巴勒斯坦、以色列和冲突问题的地理学家 "的提议显然没有任何补救措施。因此,学会错误地假定,巴勒斯坦或巴勒斯坦文化、历史和艺术本身是不能讨论的,而应该与以色列和冲突联系在一起加以界定和定位。它用一个由巴勒斯坦人主导的关于驱逐和流放的论坛来取代一个虚假的对称或平衡--"冲突",但绝不是军事占领、定居者殖民主义或种族隔离制度。无论如何估计,我们现在肯定已经不再助长这是一场'冲突'的想法了。许多人打算(或已经)通过取消会员资格和研究金、退出演讲活动以及附属研究小组和期刊的角色,重新考虑与学会的关系。我们没有参与协调这些行动,因此无法谈论它们的多重(和潜在的严重)后果,但我们想强调一个在我们与整个学科的同行交流中反复出现的问题。对于许多学生成员,尤其是那些边缘化背景的学生成员(包括许多持学习/工作签证的学生)来说,去平台化对他们意味着什么?在他们熟悉地理学和地理学机构的过程中,他们能认同这个版本的学会吗?这个学会的反射动作是关闭讨论,而讨论正是当代空间斗争的核心。该学会似乎忘记了地理学家致力于正义、向权力表达真相、质疑殖民主义和殖民遗产。这几周的时间都花在了请愿、教学、游说国会议员、媒体露面,以及支持家人、朋友和同事度过这次对加沙和整个巴勒斯坦的巴勒斯坦人的可怕袭击等重要工作上。在我们与右翼、好战和殖民主义的媒体和政治思维进行斗争的同时,不得不将我们的批判精力转向对抗我们自己的职业社会,这让我们感到非常沮丧。我们在此将这些信件永久公开,并再次呼吁 RGS-IBG 采取有意义的补救行动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An open letter to the SJTG and the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG): The War on Gaza, the Royal Geographical Society (with IBG), and a Palestinian literary event

Mindful that the Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography (SJTG) has previously declared that ‘the SJTG hopes to publish more scholarship on the past, present and future geographies of decolonization and the decolonization of geography. We encourage submissions…that advance these agendas.’ (Sidaway et al., 2021: 6) we hope that the SJTG will publish this open letter, as a public and permanent record.

During the first week of Israel's war on Gaza, the Royal Geographical Society (RGS-IBG) took the decision to cancel its hosting of a Palestinian literary event. ‘Nakba – A Century of Resistance and Solidarity’ had been due to take place on 27 October 2023 as part of the 10th edition of Palfest, an annual event that celebrates Palestinian culture and ‘the creation of language and ideas for combating colonialism in the 21st century’. Thankfully, Palfest organizers were able to find an alternative venue at short notice, but the Society's decision has not gone unnoticed. It came at a time when calls for an end to Israeli occupation (or even for a ceasefire) faced censorship in many corners of academia1 and official political discourses in the UK, where the RGS-IBG is based, were skewed such that to stand with Israel has become the terrifying norm, at whatever cost to Palestinians. It was in this context, on 13 October, as Israel's war crimes in Gaza were evident (including censure from the United Nations Secretary General), that the RGS-IBG informed PalFest that this was not the time to talk about Palestine. The Society refused to host the event.

The geographical community responded with critical force. Following discussions on social media and a list serve (the critical geography forum, which is archived at crit-geog-forum@jiscmail.ac.uk), and a letter to the Society bearing nearly 500 signatures, an official response came. The RGS-IBG issued a press statement on 27 October; the decision was not taken ‘lightly or hastily’ but was based on an assessment of risk. The statement did not, we note, use the word ‘Palestine’ once. In a subsequent videocall with the RGS-IBG, we were left unconvinced by the account of the cancellation as one based on risk, especially as the Society has the experience to receive all kinds of high-profile audiences at Lowther Lodge in Kensington. If the security detail of a royal visitor can be accommodated, then why not a discussion about literature and Palestine? Why is one of our most important professional bodies marginalizing a colonized population? These are questions at the centre of a letter we co-authored that was signed by almost 500 members of the geography community and delivered to the Society on 7 November. We took it as a sign of productive engagement that the RGS responded just two days later with a letter that apologized for not either moving the event online or making it invitation-only. The response also expressed a commitment ‘to convene an open forum which will give space and time for dialogue … with geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict, as well as to hear directly from UK-based geographers from Palestine and Israel’. Both our original letter with a list of signatories and the RGS response are included below as a form of permanent public record.

We publish the exchange here with this open letter because the RGS, while it did agree to publish the texts, did so in a way that (in our view) detracts from the issue. It is not insignificant detail that the letters were appended to the bottom of the page of an already-dated link in PDF form that requires download. Why is this topic not deemed important enough for a new URL? Why was the text not formatted in HTML, as is customary for RGS-IBG press statements and news items? Why didn’t RGS-IBG media feeds share the exchange? And why, very importantly, is the concern of 500 geographers downplayed as ‘some members of the geographical community worked together to compose a letter’? As we made clear in our latest email to the RGS Director: ‘this is precisely how to go about making sure information reaches as few people as possible’. Such a strategy signals a refusal to take the specific issue seriously and maintains a certain geographical tradition that many have challenged in recent years.

The Society has a long colonial history that it has never fully committed to address. Its colonial beginnings are well-documented (Driver, 2001), as are its connected histories of complicity with militarism (Heffernan, 1996) and extractive capital (Gbadegesin, 1999; Gilbert et al., 1999). The Society played an integral role in Britain's ‘Empire of Science’, providing the intellectual justifications and expertise for exploitation overseas. In the formative years of British and Zionist colonization, for example, Society Fellows worked with the Royal Air Force to produce reconnaissance maps of Palestine (Hamshaw Thomas, 1920), and grappled with telling questions of the day: ‘is Palestine a land suited for the peoples from the temperate climes to colonise?’ (Masterman, 1917: 16); could it be ‘restored to prosperity by a civilised Government’? (Bryce et al., 1917: 28). The RGS, it should not be forgotten, was established partly as a successor of the Palestine Association (est. 1805) that sought to bring the Holy Land into the knowledge spaces of British Empire (Kark & Goren, 2011). This material and epistemic colonial relationship with Palestine and the Middle East has been critiqued as a ‘parasitical’ for the ways that benefits accrue to Western institutions and academics while local knowledges and ethical stances are dismissed or diminished.2 We should recall the long-established critiques of such colonial geographies (e.g., Noxolo et al., 2012; Jazeel, 2014) as well as calls to carefully refigure relations between geography and the ‘Middle East’ (Mills & Hammond, 2016; Sidaway, 2023). Events such as PalFest promise to deliver a more ethical relationship in this respect and thus should be welcomed by geographers.

As the letter to the RGS demonstrated, such events are in fact welcomed by geographers (almost 500 of them). This is not in itself notable. What is notable and a source of real concern is that such an event was cancelled by the Society that represents geography and geographers in the UK. We are the geographical society. What is a representative body if not representative of its members? The RGS-IBG must effect the change that geographers call for—and have called for over many years. Some progress has been made in terms of the (belated) moves to recognize women's roles in the RGS 100+ initiative in 2013 (see also Bell & McEwan, 1996); a tentative (and contested) decolonizing agenda (Radcliffe, 2017; c/f Esson et al., 2017); and productive student engagement (Jazeel et al., 2022) with critique of colonialists in the RGS Collection (Driver, 2013; Griffiths & Baker, 2019). But the de-platforming of Palestinian voices returns to the Society's roots. It is not for us—merely five geographers among many—to set a tone for debate but it is too obvious a point to ignore that the proposal to convene ‘geographers working on Palestine, Israel and conflict’ in an ‘open forum’ is wide of any remedial mark. The Society thereby mistakenly assumes that Palestine or Palestinian culture, history and art cannot be discussed in and of itself but should be framed and located in relation to Israel and conflict. It substitutes a Palestinian-led forum on expulsion and exile for one of false symmetry or balance—a ‘conflict’ but never a regime of military occupation, settler colonialism, or apartheid. We are surely, at this point, in any estimation, beyond fuelling the idea that this is a ‘conflict’.

If our inboxes are anything to go by, this is not a closed matter. Many intend to (or have already) re-consider engagement with the Society by cancelling memberships and fellowships, withdrawing from speaking events and roles in affiliated research groups and journals. We are not involved in co-ordinating such actions and so cannot speak to their multiple (and potentially serious) consequences, but we would like to emphasize one that has been recurrent in our communications with colleagues across the discipline. For many student members, and especially those of marginalized backgrounds (including many on study/work visas), what does the de-platforming say to them? As they familiarize themselves with geography and geographical institutions, can they identify with this version of the Society? One whose reflex is to shut down the discussions that are at the heart of contemporary spatial struggles. The Society seems to forget that geographers are committed to justice, to speaking truth to power, to interrogating colonialism and colonial legacies. These weeks are spent on petitions, teach-ins, lobbying MPs, media appearances, and the important work of supporting family, friends, and colleagues through this terrible attack on Palestinians in Gaza and across Palestine. As we contest a largely right-wing, belligerent, and colonial media and political mindset, it is extremely dispiriting to have to turn our critical energies to confront our own professional society. We present the letters here for permanent public record and renew the call for the RGS-IBG to take meaningful remedial action.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
9.10%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography is an international, multidisciplinary journal jointly published three times a year by the Department of Geography, National University of Singapore, and Wiley-Blackwell. The SJTG provides a forum for discussion of problems and issues in the tropical world; it includes theoretical and empirical articles that deal with the physical and human environments and developmental issues from geographical and interrelated disciplinary viewpoints. We welcome contributions from geographers as well as other scholars from the humanities, social sciences and environmental sciences with an interest in tropical research.
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