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Remote-Control Plantations and Black Forest Relations in the Black Belt 遥感种植与黑带黑森林关系
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130109
Danielle M Purifoy
This article examines the contemporary timber industry as a reproduction of plantation power via remote control, which occurs through absentee landowners, Black family land grabs, new markets for energy, and legal regimes designed to “devalue” common property in favor of individual ownership and profit-seeking productivity. Multi-generation Black homeplaces and communities possess alternative modes of land relations to sustain themselves despite the friction between the economic interests forced by racial capitalism and the ecological interests arising from long-standing forest interdependence. With the Alabama Black Belt and the larger US South experiencing expansion of concentrated forestland ownership and local divestment, most recently through the rise of the biomass industry, the reciprocal traditions of Black forest traditions represent modes of land relation and intervention that are necessary for livable futures.
这篇文章将当代木材业视为通过远程控制复制种植园权力,这种复制通过缺席的土地所有者、黑人家庭的土地掠夺、新的能源市场以及旨在“贬值”共同财产以支持个人所有权和逐利生产力的法律制度来实现。尽管种族资本主义迫使的经济利益与长期森林相互依存所产生的生态利益之间存在摩擦,但多代黑人的家园和社区拥有可供选择的土地关系模式来维持自身。随着阿拉巴马州黑带和更大的美国南部经历了集中林地所有权的扩张和地方撤资,最近通过生物质产业的兴起,黑森林传统的互惠传统代表了宜居未来所必需的土地关系和干预模式。
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引用次数: 2
Black Placemaking under Environmental Stressors 环境压力下的黑人场所营造
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130108
Maya L. Shamsid-Deen, J. M. Porter
Dry farming, or techniques of cultivating crops in regions with domineering dry seasons, was central to Black agricultural life across the Black diaspora, but especially in the Black Pacific. Ecologically, the Black diaspora transformed semi-arid ecosystems in both the Atlantic and Pacific. However, there is a dearth of Black narratives that draw on the ecological and botanical relationships held with the land. Through a collaborative botanical and historical approach that blends historical ecology and botany, we evaluate how Black placemaking occurred despite arid climatic stressors and as a result of ecological and cultural knowledge systems. Highlighting Black agricultural life in Costa Chica, Mexico and Blackdom, New Mexico, we argue that people and plants made cimarronaje (or collective and situated Black placemaking) possible in the Western coasts and deserts of Mexico and New Mexico through botanical knowledge systems of retaining water and cultivating a life in water-scarce environments.
旱作农业,或在干旱季节专横的地区种植作物的技术,是整个黑人散居的黑人农业生活的核心,尤其是在黑人太平洋地区。在生态方面,散居的黑人改变了大西洋和太平洋半干旱的生态系统。然而,黑人叙事缺乏利用与土地的生态和植物关系。通过将历史生态学和植物学相结合的植物学和历史学方法,我们评估了在干旱气候压力和生态和文化知识系统的影响下,黑人场所的形成是如何发生的。以墨西哥Costa chicica和新墨西哥州Blackdom的黑人农业生活为重点,我们认为人类和植物通过植物学知识系统在缺水环境中保持水和培养生命,使墨西哥和新墨西哥州西海岸和沙漠的cimarronaje(或集体和定位的黑人场所创造)成为可能。
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引用次数: 0
Towards Dalit Ecologies 走向达利特生态
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130107
Indulata Prasad
The caste system has implications for the environmental experiences of Dalits (formerly “untouchables”). Dalits are disproportionately impacted by natural disasters and climate change because of their high dependence on natural resources and manual labor, including agriculture. Dalit viewpoints and ecological expertise nevertheless remain missing from the environmental literature and mainstream activism. Aligning with Black ecologies as a challenge to eco-racism, I use the term “Dalit ecologies” to conceptualize Dalit articulations with their environment and experiences of eco-casteism involving inequities such as their exclusions from natural resources and high vulnerability to pollution and waste. My analysis of scholarly literature finds that nature is caste-ized through the ideology of Hindu Brahminism that animates mainstream environmental activism in India. Dalit subjectivities and agency nevertheless remain evident in their literary and oral narratives and ongoing struggles for access to land, water, and other environmental resources.
种姓制度对贱民(以前的“贱民”)的环境体验有影响。达利特人因高度依赖自然资源和包括农业在内的体力劳动而受到自然灾害和气候变化的不成比例的影响。然而,环境文学和主流激进主义仍然缺少达利特人的观点和生态专业知识。与黑人生态一致,认为这是对生态种族主义的挑战,我用“达利特生态”一词来概念化达利特人对他们的环境和生态种姓制度的理解,包括他们被排除在自然资源之外以及极易受到污染和浪费。我对学术文献的分析发现,通过印度教婆罗门主义的意识形态,自然是种姓化的,这种意识形态激发了印度主流的环境行动主义。然而,达利特人的主观能动性在他们的文学和口头叙事以及为获得土地、水和其他环境资源而进行的持续斗争中仍然很明显。
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引用次数: 1
Introduction 介绍
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130101
Justin Hosbey, Hilda Lloréns, J. T. Roane
This collection derives from an ongoing experiment in thinking through and with the potential epistemic insurgency presented by our loose collective’s working terminology, “Black ecologies.” This term moves from the resonances between the editors’ own research in New Orleans, Puerto Rico, and Virginia, respectively. Each of us considers from our different vantages the ecological consequences of slavery and its afterlives in the enduring regime of extractivism and disposability shaping Black communities in the Diaspora. This resonance has inspired us to collaborate in various formations, including a virtual dialogue about the environment for the People’s Strike organization in July 2021, the Black Ecologies series at Black Perspectives, the virtual gathering hosted by the Black Ecologies Initiative at Arizona State University in Spring 2022, “Making Livable Worlds” (following co-editor Hilda Lloréns’ monograph title), and a zine publication, which have together added further integrity, meaning, and possibilities for thinking with this formulation outside a restrictive or proprietary vision for its potential.
这本书源于一项正在进行的实验,即思考我们松散的集体工作术语“黑人生态”所带来的潜在认知叛乱。这个术语来自编辑们分别在新奥尔良、波多黎各和弗吉尼亚州自己的研究之间的共鸣。我们每个人都从不同的角度考虑奴隶制的生态后果及其在长期的榨取主义和可支配性制度中的后遗症,这些制度塑造了散居地的黑人社区。这种共鸣激发了我们以各种形式进行合作,包括2021年7月人民罢工组织关于环境的虚拟对话、黑人视角的黑人生态系列、2022年春季亚利桑那州立大学黑人生态倡议主办的虚拟聚会,《创造宜居世界》(遵循联合编辑Hilda Lloréns的专著标题)和一本杂志出版物,它们共同增加了进一步的完整性、意义和可能性,使人们可以在对其潜力的限制性或专有视野之外思考这一提法。
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引用次数: 0
A Flowering of Memory 记忆之花
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130102
James Padilioni
In June 1945, Zora Neale Hurston wrote to W. E. B. Du Bois to propose a plan to create a Black cemetery to house the remains of famous Black Americans in Florida. Hurston suggested Florida because the state’s climate guaranteed the cemetery would be verdant year-round, and she included a landscaping plan of the flowers and trees she desired to furnish her memorial garden. As an initiate of New Orleans Hoodoo-Vodou, Hurston’s ontology of spirit allowed for the presence of the ancestors to indwell the living form of flowers, trees, and other topographical features of the land. I contextualize Hurston’s cemetery within an extended genealogy of Black necrogeography and the study of Black American deathscapes, examining the entangled relationship of Black gardening and Black burial practices as engendering a distinct ecology of root-working in which Black women gardeners propagate new forms of life in the very dust of our decomposition.
1945年6月,佐拉·尼尔·赫斯顿写信给W·E·B·杜波依斯,提出一项计划,在佛罗里达州建立一个黑人墓地,埋葬著名美国黑人的遗骸。Hurston建议去佛罗里达州,因为该州的气候保证了墓地全年都是青翠的,她还包括了一份她想要为她的纪念花园提供花草树木的景观规划。作为新奥尔良Hoodoo Vodou的启蒙者,Hurston的精神本体论允许祖先的存在,以深入了解土地的花朵、树木和其他地形特征的生活形式。我将赫斯特的墓地置于黑人墓地地理学和美国黑人死亡场景研究的扩展谱系中,研究了黑人园艺和黑人埋葬实践之间的纠缠关系,认为这产生了一种独特的根系工作生态,在这种生态中,黑人女园丁在我们腐烂的尘埃中传播新的生命形式。
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引用次数: 1
Black as Drought 黑如干旱
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130105
B. Meché
In the poem “ca’line’s prayer,” Lucille Clift on marks the progression of Black generational memory through the metaphor of drought. The poem’s 1969 publication coincided with one of the worst droughts in modern history. Across the West African Sahel late rains and the onset of famine led to widespread death and displacement. Starting from this conjunctural moment in the late 1960s and using Clifton’s provocation about the “Blackness” of drought, this article contemplates representations of arid environments in African and Afro-diasporic texts. I consider various imaginings of arid spaces, presented simultaneously as wasteland and homeland. Surveying critical scholarship on the Sahelian drought, I interrogate the contested meanings of Black life and death in deserts. I also consider the contemporary resonances of these themes, engaging African eco-critical and Afro/African futurists texts. I show how these portrayals of actual and imagined deserts reveal alternate modes of encounter forged through Black/African ecological thought.
在诗歌《ca’line’s prayer》中,露西尔·克利夫顿(Lucille clelift on)通过干旱的隐喻来标志黑人世代记忆的发展。这首诗于1969年出版,恰逢现代历史上最严重的干旱之一。在整个西非萨赫勒地区,晚雨和饥荒的爆发导致了广泛的死亡和流离失所。从20世纪60年代末的这个时刻开始,利用克利夫顿对干旱的“黑色”的挑衅,本文思考了非洲和非洲散居文本中干旱环境的表现。我考虑对干旱空间的各种想象,同时呈现为荒地和家园。我考察了关于萨赫勒干旱的批判性学术研究,探究了黑人在沙漠中生死的争议意义。我还考虑了这些主题的当代共鸣,参与非洲生态批评和非洲/非洲未来主义者的文本。我展示了这些真实的和想象中的沙漠的描绘如何揭示了通过黑人/非洲生态思想锻造的不同的相遇模式。
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引用次数: 2
Black Geographies and Black Ecologies as Insurgent Ecocriticism 反叛的生态批评中的黑色地理学与黑色生态学
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130110
A. Moulton, I. Salo
Black geographies and Black ecologies are epistemological frameworks that attend to the ideological, philosophical, and material portent of Black movements in dialectical, but not deterministic, relationships with the geographies and environments of Black life and struggle. This article reviews the Black geographies and Black ecologies literature, showing the convergence of these bodies of scholarship around themes of racial, spatial, and ecological justice. The thematic, methodological, and analytical overlaps between Black geographies and Black ecologies are quite apropos for understanding the current realities faced by Black racial-spatial-ecological justice movements; for clarifying the geographies, histories, and ecologies of Black transformation, flourishing, and everyday resistance; and for explicating how global environmental crises are rooted in racial capitalism and regimes of racialization (a sociopolitical crisis).
黑人地理学和黑人生态学是认识论框架,以辩证的,但不是决定性的,与黑人生活和斗争的地理和环境的关系,关注黑人运动的意识形态、哲学和物质预兆。本文回顾了黑人地理学和黑人生态学文献,展示了这些学术机构围绕种族、空间和生态正义主题的融合。黑人地理学和黑人生态学之间的主题、方法和分析重叠非常适合理解黑人种族-空间-生态正义运动所面临的现实;阐明了黑人转型、繁荣和日常抵抗的地理、历史和生态;并解释了全球环境危机如何植根于种族资本主义和种族化政权(一种社会政治危机)。
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引用次数: 10
Caste, Environment Justice, and Intersectionality of Dalit–Black Ecologies 种姓、环境正义与达利特黑人生态的交叉性
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130106
M. Sharma
Caste and race, Dalits and Black people, and the common ground between them have been analyzed in many areas, but their conjunction in the environmental field has been neglected. This article locates Dalit ecologies by examining the close connection between caste and nature. Drawing from a plural framework of environmental justice and histories of environmental struggles among African Americans, it focuses on historical and contemporary ecological struggles of Dalits. It contemplates how their initial articulations under the rubric of civil rights developed into significant struggles over issues of Dalit access, ownership, rights, and partnership regarding natural resources, where themes of environmental and social justice appeared at the forefront. The intersections between Dalit and Black ecologies, the rich legacies of Black Panthers and Dalit Panthers, and their overlaps in environmental struggles open for us a new historical archive, where Dalit and Black power can talk to each other in the environmental present.
种姓和种族、达利特人和黑人以及他们之间的共同点在许多领域都得到了分析,但他们在环境领域的结合却被忽视了。本文通过考察种姓与自然之间的紧密联系来定位达利特生态。它借鉴了环境正义和非裔美国人环境斗争历史的多元框架,重点关注达利特人的历史和当代生态斗争。它思考了他们在民权的标题下最初的表述是如何发展成为达利特人在自然资源的获取、所有权、权利和伙伴关系问题上的重大斗争的,在这些问题上,环境和社会正义的主题出现在了最前沿。达利特人和黑人生态之间的交叉点,黑豹和达利特黑豹的丰富遗产,以及它们在环境斗争中的重叠,为我们打开了一个新的历史档案,在这里,达利特和黑人权力可以在环境现状中相互对话。
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引用次数: 2
Black Spatial Affordances and the Residential Ecologies of the Great Migration 黑色空间绿化与大迁徙的居住生态
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130104
Amani C. Morrison
Affordance theory, originating in ecological psychology but adopted by the field of design studies, refers to possibilities for action that a subject perceives in an environment. I posit Black spatial affordance, critically employing affordances with an eye toward Black ecological and geographical practices, and I apply it to the Great Migration residential landscape and literature. Grounded in racial capitalist critique, Black geographic thought, and cultural critique at the intersections of race, place, and performance, Black spatial affordance works as an analytic to engage Black quotidian practice in racially circumscribed and delineated places and spaces. Operating at multiple scales, Black spatial affordance engages the specificity of places structured by racism to analyze the micro-level spatial negotiations Black subjects devise and employ in recognition of the terrain through which they move or are emplaced. Employing Black spatial affordance enables critical inquiry into the spatial navigation of subjects who occupy marginal positions in society.
绿化理论起源于生态心理学,但被设计研究领域所采用,指的是主体在环境中感知到的行动的可能性。我提出了黑人的空间可供性,批判性地运用可供性来关注黑人的生态和地理实践,并将其应用于大迁徙时期的住宅景观和文学。基于种族资本主义批判、黑人地理思想和种族、地点和表现交叉点的文化批判,黑人空间可供性作为一种分析方法,在种族限定和描绘的地方和空间中参与黑人日常实践。在多个尺度上运作,黑人空间可供性利用种族主义结构的地方的特殊性来分析黑人主体在识别他们移动或安置的地形时设计和使用的微观空间谈判。运用黑人空间可供性可以对社会中处于边缘地位的主体的空间导航进行批判性探究。
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引用次数: 0
We All We Got 我们拥有一切
IF 1.3 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI: 10.3167/ares.2022.130103
Ashanté M. Reese, Symone A. Johnson
Urban ecologies are fraught with inequities, often resulting in humanitarian or charity solutions that emphasize lack rather than communities’ self-determination. While these inequities have been widely documented, the COVID-19 pandemic further reveals how these crises are not the sum result of individual failures. Rather, they are systemically produced through policies that harm people. How do Black urban residents contend with the sociohistorical antagonisms between feelings of scarcity (e.g., food and housing insecurity, underemployment, and financial strain) and aspirations for abundance? Using ethnographic encounters in Chicago and Austin we consider how practices of mutual aid are meaningful both spatially and affectively. First, we explore how mutual aid transforms “decaying” urban spaces to meet residents’ needs. Second, we explore felt experiences of mutuality in social relationships as distinct from authoritarian, charity-based relationality. Thinking these spatial and affective dimensions collectively, we work toward a framework of Black ecologies of care and mutual aid.
城市生态充满了不平等,往往导致人道主义或慈善解决方案强调缺乏,而不是社区的自决。虽然这些不平等现象已被广泛记录,但2019冠状病毒病大流行进一步揭示了这些危机如何不是个人失败的总和。相反,它们是通过伤害人民的政策系统性地产生的。黑人城市居民如何应对社会历史上的匮乏感(例如,食物和住房不安全、就业不足和经济压力)和对富足的渴望之间的对立?通过在芝加哥和奥斯汀的民族志遭遇,我们考虑了互助的实践在空间和情感上是如何有意义的。首先,我们探讨互助如何改造“衰败”的城市空间,以满足居民的需求。其次,我们探索社会关系中相互关系的感受体验,以区别于专制的、基于慈善的关系。综合考虑这些空间和情感维度,我们致力于建立一个关怀和互助的黑人生态框架。
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引用次数: 4
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Environment and Society-Advances in Research
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