Making new history: Contemporary art and the temporal orientations of climate change in Oceania

Q2 Arts and Humanities Journal of New Zealand and Pacific Studies Pub Date : 2021-12-01 DOI:10.1386/nzps_00072_1
Maggie Wander
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Abstract

This article explores artistic production in the region of Oceania that resists the ahistorical and future-oriented temporality of climate change discourse, as it perpetuates colonial structures of power by denying Indigenous futures and ignoring the violent histories that have led to the current climate breakdown. In the video poem Anointed (2018), prominent climate justice activist Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner strategically combines spoken word poetry with visual montage in order to situate Cold War nuclear tests by the US military within the same temporal plane as rising sea levels currently threatening the Marshall Islands. Katerina Teaiwa’s exhibition Project Banaba (2017) similarly mobilizes archival imagery in order to visualize the genealogical relationship between Banabans and the settler landscapes of Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia. Sean Connelly’s architectural and design practice in Hawaii Futures, an ongoing digital design project that engages with the threats of sea level rise and coastal erosion in Hawaii, problematizes linear formations of time and favours a future structured around cyclical, ecological time instead. Interacting with vastly different sites, strategies and temporalities, these three multidisciplinary projects provide critical alternatives to the ahistorical framing of colonial climate change in Oceania and thus play a crucial role in constructing a more just future.
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创造新历史:当代艺术与大洋洲气候变化的时间取向
本文探讨了大洋洲地区的艺术创作,它抵制了气候变化话语的非历史性和面向未来的时间性,因为它通过否认土著人的未来和忽视导致当前气候崩溃的暴力历史,使殖民权力结构永久化。在视频诗歌《Anoited》(2018)中,著名气候正义活动家凯西·杰特尼尔·基金纳(Kathy Jetñil Kijiner)战略性地将口语诗歌与视觉蒙太奇相结合,以将美国军方的冷战核试验与目前威胁马绍尔群岛的海平面上升置于同一时间平面内。Katerina Teaiwa的展览Project Banaba(2017)同样调动了档案图像,以可视化Banabans与新西兰和澳大利亚的Aotearoa定居者景观之间的谱系关系。肖恩·康纳利(Sean Connelly)在夏威夷未来(Hawaii Futures)的建筑和设计实践是一个正在进行的数字设计项目,致力于应对夏威夷海平面上升和海岸侵蚀的威胁,它解决了时间的线性形成问题,并倾向于围绕周期性的生态时间构建未来。这三个多学科项目与截然不同的地点、战略和时间相互作用,为大洋洲殖民地气候变化的非历史框架提供了重要的替代方案,从而在建设一个更加公正的未来方面发挥了至关重要的作用。
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
Journal of New Zealand and Pacific Studies
Journal of New Zealand and Pacific Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies covers disciplines including the humanities and social sciences, and subjects such as cultural studies, history, literature, film, anthropology, politics and sociology. Each issue of this publication aims to establish a balance between papers on New Zealand and papers on the South Pacific, with a reports and book reviews section included. The journal is sponsored by the New Zealand Studies Association and hosted by the University of Vienna. It has replaced the key publication NZSA Bulletin of New Zealand Studies.
期刊最新文献
In conversation with Stallone Vaiaoga-Ioasa Mothers’ Darlings of The South Pacific: The Children of Indigenous Women and U.S. Servicemen, World War II, Judith A. Bennett and Angela Wanhalla (eds) (2016) Beyond Hawaii: Native Labor in the Pacific World, Gregory Rosenthal (2018) The New Zealand Wars: Ngā Pakanga o Aotearoa, Vincent O’Malley (2019) Special Issue: New Scholarship in New Zealand and Pacific Studies Part 2
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