《用文字说出的语言:去殖民化、知识生产和环境不公正》,作者:Abdulrazak Gurnah

Q3 Arts and Humanities
M. Ferreira
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了Gurnah著作中体现的非殖民化、气候变化和环境不公之间的关系。古尔纳的作品被认为是非殖民文学的典范。非殖民化文学关注的是超越殖民主体本质的问题,强调资本主义世界经济与现代非殖民化主体性的形成之间的关系,即这些主体性暴露于环境不公正之下。本文旨在回答以下研究问题:Abdulrazak Gurnah如何解决非殖民化、气候变化和环境不公正之间的联系?本文认为,Gurnah通过讨论关于殖民主体和后殖民自我的知识生产,以及建立环境/气候不稳定性与生物政治不稳定性之间的联系,解决了这样一个问题。本文以古尔纳的两部小说《大海》和《来生》为基础,讨论了古尔纳笔下的人物是如何受到社会和经济关系的种族化、生物政治和气候不稳定的折磨的。质疑关于殖民主体和后殖民自我的知识生产具有重要意义,因为它强调了改变有关气候变化的知识生产方式的重要性。建立环境/气候不稳定性与生物政治不稳定性之间的联系,允许讨论殖民和资本主义权力结构如何负责传播环境不公正,突出土著气候变化研究的认识重要性。我们对古纳的作品进行了批判性分析,并考虑到从全球南方文学的角度讨论应对气候变化和环境不公正的相关性的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Language Spoken with Words: Decolonization, Knowledge Production and Environmental Injustice in the Work of Abdulrazak Gurnah
The paper analyses the relationship between decolonization, climate change, and environmental injustice as represented in the writings of Abdulrazak Gurnah. Gurnah’s work is considered an example of decolonial literature. Decolonial literature has focused on issues beyond the nature of the colonial subject, highlighting the relationship between the capitalist world economy and the formation of modern decolonial subjectivities, namely the exposure of those subjectivities to environmental injustice. The paper intends to answer the following research question: how does Abdulrazak Gurnah address the articulation between decolonization, climate change, and environmental injustice? The paper argues that Gurnah addresses such an articulation by discussing knowledge production about the colonial subject and the postcolonial self and instituting an association between environmental/climate precarity and biopolitical precarity. Building from two of Gurnah’s novels—By the Sea and Afterlives – the paper debates how Gurnah’s characters are afflicted by the racialization of social and economic relations and biopolitical and climate precarity. Questioning knowledge production about the colonial subject and the postcolonial self is significant because it underscores the importance of transforming how knowledge about climate change is produced. Instituting an association between environmental/climate precarity and biopolitical precarity permits debating how colonial and capitalist power structures are responsible for disseminating environmental injustice, foregrounding the epistemic importance of indigenous climate change studies. The work of Gurnah is critically analyzed, bearing in mind the need to discuss the relevance of addressing climate change and environmental injustice from the perspective of global south literature.
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来源期刊
Journal of Narrative and Language Studies
Journal of Narrative and Language Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.30
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0.00%
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审稿时长
4 weeks
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