资本主义时代的创造:通过节约重新思考原始积累

IF 2.9 1区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
David Thomas Suell
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引用次数: 1

摘要

学者们重新提出了原始积累的概念,来描述显性暴力是一种持续的、结构性的,而不仅仅是历史上的资本主义统治工具。然而,资本主义的逻辑与资本主义的历史之间的关系仍然模糊不清。资本主义在政治上是强制的和霸权的,但正在进行的资本主义暴力事件一再出现,好像他们正在为资本主义的增长开辟新的领域或寻找新的边界。在本文中,我提供了一个新的框架来理解原始积累如何不仅创造了资本主义的物质秩序,而且还创造了激励和再生产资本主义暴力的时间秩序。聚焦于马赛人在肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚保护土地上的冲突,我描述了原始积累如何强加于历史叙事,使资本主义自然化,抑制竞争的生活方式的生态节奏,以及通过将被剥夺人口描述为原始而将其边缘化的身份类别。通过阐明对特定人群的不成比例的伤害是如何合理的,这些合理的理由是如何复制和自然化资本主义统治的,以及暂时性如何不仅代表了一个统治场所,而且代表了政治斗争,这本书推进了关于定居者殖民主义、种族资本主义和潜在抵抗的关键辩论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The creation of capitalist time: Rethinking primitive accumulation through conservation
Scholars have revived the concept of primitive accumulation to describe how explicit violence is an ongoing and structural, rather than simply historical, tool for capitalist domination. However, the relationship between the logic of capitalism and history of capitalism remains obscured. Capitalism is politically enforced and hegemonic, but ongoing instances of capitalist violence repeatedly appear as though they were breaking new ground or finding new frontiers for capitalist growth. In this paper, I offer a novel framework for understanding how primitive accumulation not only creates a capitalist material order but also a temporal order that motivates and reproduces capitalist violence. Focusing on Maasai conflicts over conservation lands in Kenya and Tanzania, I describe how primitive accumulation imposes the historical narratives that naturalize capitalism, ecological rhythms that suppress competing lifeways, and identity categories that marginalize dispossessed populations by characterizing them as primitive. This account advances key debates about settler-colonialism, racial capitalism, and potential resistance by clarifying how disproportionate harm against particular populations is justified, how those justifications reproduce and naturalize capitalist domination, and how temporality represents not only a site of domination but also political struggle.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: EPD: Society and Space is an international, interdisciplinary scholarly and political project. Through both a peer reviewed journal and an editor reviewed companion website, we publish articles, essays, interviews, forums, and book reviews that examine social struggles over access to and control of space, place, territory, region, and resources. We seek contributions that investigate and challenge the ways that modes and systems of power, difference and oppression differentially shape lives, and how those modes and systems are resisted, subverted and reworked. We welcome work that is empirically engaged and furthers a range of critical epistemological approaches, that pushes conceptual boundaries and puts theory to work in innovative ways, and that consciously navigates the fraught politics of knowledge production within and beyond the academy.
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