{"title":"Green Hell: Detention, art, and activism in an English landscape","authors":"S. Donald, Kaya Davies Hayon","doi":"10.16993/rl.81","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper revolves on the carceral practices of Morton Hall IRC (Immigration Removal Centre) and of the role of visual imagery in the campaigns against them. Morton Hall is located in Lincolnshire, a rural county in England with a long history of agricultural innovation. It observes and debates a sense of the dissonance between institution and location that Morton Hall shared with Manus Island in the Pacific, the site of another postcolonial prison camp also in a beautiful setting. We interrogate how the legacies of British colonialism in the Pacific might help to explain that shared incongruity between function and place. We discuss a public initiative that aimed to give artistic and activist expression to these insights by highlighting the physical, historical, and emotional connections between Lincoln, the surrounding countryside, and the IRC. The aim of this planned event, The Big Walk, was to show that there is no absolute spatial disconnect between places of incarceration and places of freedom. In describing and analysing the cultural legacy of the planned event, curtailed by the 2020 pandemic, we draw on the wider oeuvre of British-Croatian artist, Natasha Davis, which include a film (2020) commissioned to replace the Walk and yet draw attention to the landscape as layered by time and memory, a landscape that yields ups a cross-temporal narrative spored beneath our feet.","PeriodicalId":36857,"journal":{"name":"Rural Landscapes","volume":"23 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Rural Landscapes","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.16993/rl.81","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper revolves on the carceral practices of Morton Hall IRC (Immigration Removal Centre) and of the role of visual imagery in the campaigns against them. Morton Hall is located in Lincolnshire, a rural county in England with a long history of agricultural innovation. It observes and debates a sense of the dissonance between institution and location that Morton Hall shared with Manus Island in the Pacific, the site of another postcolonial prison camp also in a beautiful setting. We interrogate how the legacies of British colonialism in the Pacific might help to explain that shared incongruity between function and place. We discuss a public initiative that aimed to give artistic and activist expression to these insights by highlighting the physical, historical, and emotional connections between Lincoln, the surrounding countryside, and the IRC. The aim of this planned event, The Big Walk, was to show that there is no absolute spatial disconnect between places of incarceration and places of freedom. In describing and analysing the cultural legacy of the planned event, curtailed by the 2020 pandemic, we draw on the wider oeuvre of British-Croatian artist, Natasha Davis, which include a film (2020) commissioned to replace the Walk and yet draw attention to the landscape as layered by time and memory, a landscape that yields ups a cross-temporal narrative spored beneath our feet.
本文围绕Morton Hall IRC(移民驱逐中心)的拘留实践以及视觉图像在反对他们的运动中的作用展开。莫顿霍尔位于林肯郡,这是一个有着悠久农业创新历史的英格兰乡村。它观察并讨论了莫顿大厅与太平洋上的马努斯岛(Manus Island)之间的制度和地点之间的不和谐感,马努斯岛是另一个后殖民集中营的所在地,也位于美丽的环境中。我们探讨英国在太平洋的殖民主义遗产如何有助于解释功能和地点之间的共同不协调。我们讨论了一项公共倡议,旨在通过强调林肯、周围乡村和IRC之间的物理、历史和情感联系,以艺术和积极的方式表达这些见解。这个计划中的活动“大游行”的目的是表明,在监禁的地方和自由的地方之间没有绝对的空间隔离。在描述和分析计划中的活动的文化遗产时,由于2020年的大流行而减少,我们借鉴了英国-克罗地亚艺术家娜塔莎戴维斯的更广泛的作品,其中包括一部电影(2020年),该电影被委托取代散步,并引起人们对时间和记忆分层的景观的关注,这一景观在我们脚下产生了跨时间的叙事。