绘制天堂地理:黑色生态、富有成效的怀旧和下沉地面上生活的可能性

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
M. Barra
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文考虑了路易斯安那州东南部沉没地面临环境危机时黑人生命的培养。在与人类学和地理学的学者就黑人的地方形成和记忆进行对话时,我研究了过去生态实践的个人和集体记忆如何为现在的生态消亡提供反叙事。利用生产性怀旧的概念,我通过Sylvia Wynter和Katherine McKittrick对情节的表述,将我对集体记忆的分析定位为种植园的反地理,黑人通过种植园培养基于生态的自力更生、关爱和自由。我用口述历史和民族志来展示情节中的社会生态精神是如何通过集体记忆穿越时间的,用与生态和种族正义相关的气候变化未来的愿景打断当今的生态危机叙事。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Plotting a Geography of Paradise: Black Ecologies, Productive Nostalgia, and the Possibilities of Life on Sinking Ground
This article considers the cultivation of Black life in the face of environmental crisis in the sinking grounds of southeast Louisiana. In dialogue with scholarship in anthropology and geography on Black place‐making and memory, I examine how individual and collective memories of past ecological practices provide counternarratives of ecological demise for the present. Working with the concept of productive nostalgia, I situate my analysis of collective memory via Sylvia Wynter's and Katherine McKittrick's formulations of the plot as a countergeography of the plantation through which Black people cultivate ecologically based self‐reliance, care, and freedom. I use oral history and ethnography to demonstrate how the socioecological ethos of the plot travels across time through collective memory, interrupting present‐day ecological crisis narratives with visions of climate changed futures tied to ecological and racial justice.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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