遗赠一个世界

Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.3167/cja.2022.400208
K. Weston
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在最近关于气候变化的辩论中,一种生态继承的传递模式将生态破坏的责任分配给了被描述为陷入冲突的几代人,同时将地球描述为能够分配给一组继承人的世俗财产。这篇文章以北美为重点,研究了关于所有权、占有、处置权和继承的假设,这些假设隐含在将一个生态受损的世界遗赠给担心这可能是最后一代的接受者的比喻中。这些假设中的许多都将那些已经认为自己被剥夺了财产的人排除在外。土著对责任、临时性和地域的观念,建议我们开始去殖民化生态继承的花言巧语,让人类无论结果如何,都能在灭绝之外的迹象下生活。
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Bequeathing a World
In recent debates about climate change, a transmission model of ecological inheritance has apportioned responsibility for ecological damage to generations portrayed as locked in conflict, while depicting Earth as a worldly possession capable of being assigned to a set of heirs. With a focus on North America, this article examines assumptions about ownership, possession, dispositional authority, and succession embedded in the trope of bequeathing an ecologically compromised world to a receiving generation that worries it might be the last. Many of these assumptions create exclusions for those who already apprehend themselves as dispossessed. Indigenous conceptions of responsibility, temporality, and place suggest ways to begin to decolonise the rhetoric of ecological inheritance, allowing humans to inhabit the everyday under signs other than extinction, regardless of how things turn out.
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