The discourse of the Anthropocene and posthumanism: Indigenous peoples and local communities

IF 1.4 2区 社会学 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES Ethnicities Pub Date : 2023-12-21 DOI:10.1177/14687968231219778
Sender Dovchin, Ulemj Dovchin, Graeme Gower
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Abstract

Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs) are characterised by their special relationships with their traditional lands and the natural world, which are essential to their physical and cultural survival, identity, knowledge, and spirituality. They are custodians of the land; however, often made invisible and voiceless in the face of irreversible destruction caused by human-induced planetary change. This Special Issue (SI) is inspired by the stories, worldviews, knowledge systems, and lived experiences of IPLCs worldwide. Based on the compounded impacts of global climate change and other human-induced crises on their ancestral lands, contributors to this SI recognise that the world has entered the Anthropocene – the epoch of human-induced planetary change. While human activities are considered geologically recent, they have profoundly impacted the planet. The contributors challenge the discourse of the Anthropocene, not only because it takes humanity as the prime reference point in understanding the world but also because of its reproduction of the onto-epistemological foundations of Eurocentric philosophy, which underpins colonialism and racial capitalism. This SI opens up space for historically marginalised IPLCs’ cosmologies, which embody their holistic, spiritually and physically interconnected, interdependent, and reciprocal relationships with land, the natural world, and non-human beings. It expands and pluralises the discourse of the Anthropocene through the concept of posthumanism to recognise alternative knowledge systems that decentre humanity’s dominant position in understanding the world. IPLCs’ onto-epistemologies align with posthuman or more-than-human ways of knowing, being, and doing, which embody their reciprocal relationships with land, non-human beings, and the natural world that are all deemed as living entities with agency. IPLCs’ voices urge us to relearn our ancestral ways of recognizing and interacting with the world and reconnect to our holistic relationships with the planet Earth and its beings to ensure the continuity of nature and culture.
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人类世和后人文主义的论述:土著人民和地方社区
土著人民和地方社区(IPLCs)的特点是他们与传统土地和自然世界的特殊关系,这对他们的物质和文化生存、身份认同、知识和精神信仰至关重要。他们是土地的守护者;然而,面对人类引起的地球变化所造成的不可逆转的破坏,他们往往被忽视,没有发言权。本特刊(SI)的灵感来源于世界各地 IPLCs 的故事、世界观、知识体系和生活经历。基于全球气候变化和其他人类引起的危机对其祖先土地的复合影响,本特刊的撰稿人认识到世界已经进入了人类世--人类引起的地球变化的时代。虽然人类活动在地质学上被认为是最近发生的,但却对地球产生了深远的影响。撰稿人对 "人类世 "的论述提出了质疑,这不仅是因为它将人类作为理解世界的主要参照点,还因为它再现了欧洲中心主义哲学的认识论基础,而欧洲中心主义哲学是殖民主义和种族资本主义的基础。这一 SI 为历史上被边缘化的 IPLCs 宇宙观开辟了空间,体现了他们与土地、自然世界和非人类的整体、精神和物质上的相互联系、相互依存和相互关系。它通过 "后人类主义 "的概念,对 "人类世 "的论述进行了扩展和多元化,以承认人类在理解世界时所处的主导地位的替代性知识体系。IPLCs 的认识论与后人类或超越人类的认识、存在和行为方式相一致,体现了他们与土地、非人类和自然世界的互惠关系,而这些都被视为具有能动性的生命实体。IPLC 的声音敦促我们重新学习祖先认识世界和与世界互动的方式,并重新连接我们与地球及其生物的整体关系,以确保自然和文化的连续性。
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来源期刊
Ethnicities
Ethnicities ETHNIC STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
47
期刊介绍: There is currently a burgeoning interest in both sociology and politics around questions of ethnicity, nationalism and related issues such as identity politics and minority rights. Ethnicities is a cross-disciplinary journal that will provide a critical dialogue between these debates in sociology and politics, and related disciplines. Ethnicities has three broad aims, each of which adds a new and distinctive dimension to the academic analysis of ethnicity, nationalism, identity politics and minority rights.
期刊最新文献
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