证人的未来:自然、种族和超越人类的环境公众

Q4 Arts and Humanities
S. Sheikh
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引用次数: 12

摘要

在当代后种族隔离时代的南非,“环境公众”的创造障碍,以及自然和种族化主题的政治沉默和客观化,这篇文章质疑并试图扩展一个特定的人物:证人。在更广泛的环境暴力的全球背景下,证人——根据经典的证词理论,证人是以自己的名义说话的主权主体——在主动/被动和主体/客体的构建类别的背景下被考虑,因为这些类别在种族、自然和不断变化的人类概念中发挥作用。标题,“证人的未来”,提出了两个问题:(i)在(缺失的)环境公众的背景下,当我们走向未来时,我们必须以何种方式重新概念化证人的形象——在本体论、认识论和政治层面?(二)面对不断升级的人类破坏,证人是否有可能不仅按照普遍接受的时间见证模式为过去的事件和经历作证,而且还为未来展开的持续经历作证?在回答这些问题时,有人认为:(a)证人不能再被视为一个孤立的人物,而必须被视为证词星座的一部分;(b)在回应生态问题时,这个星座必须是一个超越人类的集体:人类与非人类之间的一种纠缠形式的社会性,不诉诸于现代主义的“人类”和“自然”范畴。通过南非,从欧洲大屠杀到全球人道主义和法医实践,通过欧洲和北美的科学技术研究以及美洲印第安人的思想,本文收集了一套笼统的问题和命题,这些问题和命题可能反过来又被纳入具体的地点。关键是经典的后殖民问题,即谁应该或有权以谁的名义发言。在证人经常被拒绝自我辩护,或者更严重的是完全缺席或失踪的情况下,文章调查了补充证人的各种做法。然而,这些实践往往发现自己陷入了一种代表性的困境,即尽管有必要捍卫人类和非人类的权利,但为被剥夺或失踪的主体(包括自然)“说话”或“发出声音”,有进一步复制存在、知识和权力的原始殖民矩阵的风险。从美学和思辩的实践中,本文提出了可能的策略,以应对代表性的挑战,并构想出超越人类的环境公众,这些公众反对新自由主义的责任个性化,并积极见证环境退化和可能更宜居的未来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Future of the Witness: Nature, Race and More-than-Human Environmental Publics
Taking leave from obstacles to the creation of an 'environmental public' in contemporary post-apartheid South Africa and the political silencing and objectification of both nature and racialised subjects, this article interrogates and seeks to expand a specific figure: that of the witness. In the broader, global context of environmental violence, the witness – who, according to classical theories of testimony, is a sovereign subject who speaks in their own name – is considered in the context of constructed categories of active/passive and subject/object as these play out across race, nature and shifting conceptions of the human. The title, 'the future of the witness', prompts two questions: (i) In the context of (missing) environmental publics, in what ways we must reconceptualise the figure of the witness – on ontological, epistemological and political levels – as we move into the future? (ii) Faced with ever-escalating Anthropocenic destruction, is it possible for a witness to testify not only to past events and experiences, as per the generally accepted temporal schema of witnessing, but also to ongoing experiences that unfold into the future? In responding to these questions, it is argued (a) that the witness can no longer be considered as an isolated figure, but rather must be conceived as part of a testimonial constellation; and (b) that, in responding to ecological concerns, this constellation must be a more-than-human collective: an entangled form of sociality between humans and nonhumans that does not take recourse to modernist categories of 'human' and 'nature'. Moving, via South Africa, from the European Holocaust to global humanitarian and forensic practices, through European and North American science and technology studies as well as Amerindian thinking, the article gathers a generalised set of questions and propositions that might in turn be folded back into specific locales. Key is the classic postcolonial question of who ought to or has the right to speak in the name of whom. Where the witness is often denied self-representation or, more gravely, entirely absent or missing, the article surveys various practices of supplementary witnessing. However, such practices ofen find themselves caught within a representational dilemma whereby, despite the necessity of defending the rights of humans and nonhumans alike, 'speaking for' or 'giving voice' to dispossessed or missing subjects – including nature – runs the risk of further replicating the original colonial matrix of being, knowledge and power that is being contested. Drawing from aesthetic and speculative practices, the article asks what possible strategies might be available for navigating the challenges of representation and for conceiving of more-than-human environmental publics that contest the neoliberal indivisualization of responsibilty and actively bear witness both to unfolding environmental degradation and possible more liveable futures.
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Kronos
Kronos Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
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