Practicing Palliation for Extinction and Climate Change

IF 1.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Environmental Humanities Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1215/22011919-10216250
Julia D. Gibson
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Abstract

Even with the advent of climate change, mainstream environmentalism lacks a robust death ethics, that is, ethical theories and practices for attending directly to what is owed to the unjustly dead and dying. This article draws on Indigenous, Afrofuturist, and feminist science fiction narratives and their correlating lived practices to explore how death ethics for those driven extinct by climate change and other environmental injustices can and ought to go beyond affect, symbolism, and abstraction. It puts forward environmental palliation as an alternative framework for grappling with the injustice of extinction as and in publics. Far from a glorified form of euthanasia, palliation is an ethic and a practice geared toward providing good or better deaths for particular entities under specific conditions of injustice. In death, palliation cedes to remembrance, an ethic and practice for keeping the dead alive in memory so that they can be cared for. When done right, these death ethics are inextricably linked with climate justice for the living and those yet-to-be.
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为物种灭绝和气候变化实施姑息政策
即使随着气候变化的到来,主流环保主义也缺乏健全的死亡伦理,即直接关注非正义死亡和临终者的伦理理论和实践。这篇文章借鉴了土著、非洲未来主义者和女权主义科幻小说的叙述,以及他们相关的生活实践,来探索那些因气候变化和其他环境不公正而灭绝的人的死亡伦理如何能够也应该超越情感、象征和抽象。它提出了环境缓和作为一种替代框架,以解决在公共场合灭绝的不公正问题。姑息绝不是一种光荣的安乐死形式,而是一种伦理和实践,旨在为特定条件下的特定实体提供良好或更好的死亡。在死亡中,姑息让位于记忆,这是一种让死者活在记忆中的伦理和实践,以便他们能够得到照顾。如果处理得当,这些死亡伦理与对生者和未来者的气候正义有着千丝万缕的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Environmental Humanities
Environmental Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
8.70%
发文量
32
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊最新文献
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