Shared routes of mammalian kinship: Race and migration in Long Island whaling diasporas

IF 1.7 2区 社会学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY Island Studies Journal Pub Date : 2021-05-01 DOI:10.24043/ISJ.160
Ayasha Guerin
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

In this paper, I bring together the historiography of Indigenous shore whaling on Long Island with narratives of Black diaspora and whale studies to discuss shared routes of migration in the 17th-19th centuries and shared fates under colonial capitalism. Demonstrating how the extractive conquests of colonial settlers shaped the exploitative treatment of whales and the movements of social groups who lived in dependence to them, I build on Black feminists’ theoretical work and methodologies to look for interspecies, trans-oceanic navigations of survival. In doing so, I demonstrate how intimate relations between whales and whalers were shaped by processes of colonization, coastal displacement, and by conditions of indebtedness, enslavement, and fugitivity. I argue the importance of recognizing whales as mammalian kin, caught in the same net of colonial capitalist settlement and resource extraction as their hunters. Finally, inspired by the metaphor of echolocation, a method of listening which helps whales to navigate oceans, I suggest that we might listen for the socio-ecological reverberations of historic whaling diasporas to learn from emergent strategies of survival.
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哺乳动物亲缘关系的共同路线:长岛捕鲸侨民的种族和迁移
在这篇论文中,我将长岛土著海岸捕鲸的史学与黑人侨民的叙述和鲸鱼研究结合起来,讨论17-19世纪的共同迁徙路线和殖民资本主义下的共同命运。我在黑人女权主义者的理论工作和方法论的基础上,展示了殖民定居者的榨取式征服如何塑造了对鲸鱼的剥削待遇以及依赖鲸鱼生活的社会群体的运动,以寻找种间、跨洋的生存方式。在这样做的过程中,我展示了鲸鱼和捕鲸者之间的亲密关系是如何被殖民化、沿海流离失所以及负债、奴役和逃亡的条件所塑造的。我认为承认鲸鱼是哺乳动物亲属的重要性,它们和猎人一样被殖民资本主义定居点和资源开采的网所捕获。最后,受回声定位隐喻的启发,我建议我们可以倾听历史上捕鲸流散者的社会生态反响,从新出现的生存策略中学习。回声定位是一种帮助鲸鱼在海洋中航行的倾听方法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
26.70%
发文量
29
审稿时长
6 weeks
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