塞拉利昂的气候变化和生态灭绝:在Aminatta Forna的祖先之石和爱的记忆中的表现

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Shruti Das, Deepshikha Routray
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引用次数: 3

摘要

战争在破坏土地和森林方面发挥了重要作用,因此是气候变化的一个主要因素。战争造成的退化在非洲尤为严重。由于残酷的殖民统治和最近的后殖民内战,曾经绿意盎然的非洲大陆如今几乎被砍伐殆尽,珍贵的自然资源也被掠夺一空。塞拉利昂内战从1991年到2002年持续了11年多,对土地和森林造成了严重破坏。因此,人们所遭受的焦虑和创伤不仅包括人类暴行的更明显方面,还包括与气候变化有关的生态灭绝的长期影响。解决创伤性生态灾难的潜在叙事是由气候变化的生存威胁引起的焦虑和抑郁感。本文展示了叙事如何隐喻地代表生态灭绝和气候变化,并认为这样的故事有助于人们应对焦虑和创伤的现实生活压力。为了确立这一论点,本文借鉴了科学和社会学数据,并将这些vis-à-vis叙事情节放在Aminatta Forna的小说《祖先的石头》(2006)和《爱的记忆》(2010)中。在这些小说中,福尔纳描绘了殖民和内战给塞拉利昂造成的生态危机。凯西·卡鲁斯的创伤理论解释了虚构的塞拉利昂人物所遭受的焦虑和创伤后应激障碍——战争和生态灭绝。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate Change and Ecocide in Sierra Leone: Representations in Aminatta Forna’s Ancestor Stones and The Memory of Love
War has been instrumental in destroying land and forests and thus is a major contributor to climate change. Degradation due to war has been especially significant in Africa. The African continent, once green, is now almost denuded of its rich forests and pillaged of its precious natural resources due to the brutality of colonisation and more recent postcolonial civil wars. In Sierra Leone the civil war continued for over eleven years from 1991 to 2002 and wrought havoc on the land and forests. Thus the anxiety and trauma suffered by the people not only includes the more visible aspects of human brutality, but also the long lasting effects of ecocide which relate to climate change. Underlying narratives that address traumatic ecological disasters is a sense of anxiety and depression resulting from the existential threat of climate change. This paper demonstrates how narratives can metaphorically represent both ecocide and climate change and argues that such stories help people in tackling the real life stresses of  anxiety and trauma. To establish the argument this paper has drawn on scientific and sociological data and placed these vis-à-vis narrative episodes in Aminatta Forna’s novels Ancestor Stones (2006) and The Memory of Love (2010). In these novels Forna depicts the ecological crisis that colonisation and civil war have wrought on Sierra Leone. The anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder – of war and ecocide – suffered by the fictional Sierra Leonean characters are explained through Cathy Caruth’s trauma theory.  
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来源期刊
eTropic
eTropic Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
2.00
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27
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