From Kern Island to the Streets of Bakersfield: Logics of Contamination, Embodied Empiricisms, and the Afterlives of Reclamation

V. Underhill
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Abstract

California’s arid San Joaquin Valley was once inundated by lakes and wetlands. Through settler colonial discourses of contamination, a network of canals and aqueducts drained these lakes and wetlands in the late nineteenth century. Now, the Valley’s air and water are contaminated by pesticides, nitrates, and hydrocarbons from oil extraction and large-scale agriculture. Building from archival research and participant observation with environmental justice activists, this paper bridges settler colonial and critical Indigenous studies, work on racial capitalism, and feminist science studies to investigate logics of contamination in the production of private property through hydraulic projects. California’s hydrologic history shows that ideas of contamination were contested alongside emergent ideas of the racialized body. Hydraulic infrastructure, then, was not only an economic project but functioned within a larger logic of contamination that further articulated racial formations and settler sovereignty claims. Yet chemical contamination can also induce futurities, intimacies, and collectivities in powerful ways, as environmental justice activists in the valley consistently highlight. I argue that a critical analytic of contamination can trace how racial categories are ecologically produced and reconfigured, not only through differential relationships to land, but through changes in the land itself.
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从克恩岛到贝克斯菲尔德的街道:污染的逻辑,具体化的经验主义,以及开垦的来世
加州干旱的圣华金河谷曾经被湖泊和湿地淹没。通过殖民者关于污染的言论,19世纪后期,一个运河和渡槽网络将这些湖泊和湿地排干。现在,山谷的空气和水受到了农药、硝酸盐和石油开采和大规模农业生产产生的碳氢化合物的污染。本文以档案研究和环境正义活动家的参与观察为基础,将定居者殖民地和批判性土著研究、种族资本主义工作和女权主义科学研究联系起来,调查通过水利工程生产私有财产的污染逻辑。加州的水文学历史表明,污染的观点与种族化的身体的新兴观点是有争议的。因此,水利基础设施不仅是一个经济项目,而且在更大的污染逻辑中发挥作用,进一步阐明了种族形成和定居者的主权要求。然而,正如硅谷的环境正义活动人士一直强调的那样,化学污染也能以强大的方式诱导未来、亲密关系和集体。我认为,对污染的批判性分析可以追溯种族类别是如何在生态上产生和重新配置的,不仅通过与土地的差异关系,而且通过土地本身的变化。
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