超越单一作物的种植园:从殖民时期的安哥拉到圣多美的大麻生态

Marta Macedo
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摘要

圣多美是几内亚湾的一个小岛,曾是葡萄牙的殖民地,是分析种植园 "作物景观 "发展的一个典范。这些作物景观在 16 世纪围绕蔗糖出现,在 19 世纪 50 年代与咖啡一起发展,并在 19 世纪 80 年代以后与可可一起得到巩固。虽然不能忽视圣多美种植园的单一种植性质以及特定植物在这些种植园生态中的中心地位,但还有其他人类/植物组合,它们维持、颠覆或平行于种植园的生产、利润和权力目标。本文以大麻为切入点,探讨种植园劳动人民与种植园环境之间的不同关系,痛苦、治疗和暴力之间的不同关系,劳动、享乐和权力之间的不同关系。文章将探讨大麻是如何成为十九世纪末从安哥拉招募到圣多美的人们生活的一部分,进而成为岛上种植园世界的一部分。它还将讨论关于大麻的殖民论述是如何掩盖和压制这种植物在当代种植园历史中的存在的,不管它在档案中留下了什么痕迹。大麻的历史实际上是重要的历史:它们通过展示即使在剥削的条件下,劳动社区和植物如何共同创造自主、关爱和休闲的空间,反驳了帝国的主叙事。
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Plantations Beyond Monocrops: Cannabis Ecologies From Colonial Angola to São Tomé
São Tomé, a small island in the Gulf of Guinea and a former Portuguese colony, is an exemplary place to analyze the development of plantation “cropscapes.” These cropscapes emerged around sugar in the sixteenth century, evolved with coffee in the 1850s and consolidated with cocoa from the 1880s onwards. While is impossible to ignore the monocultural nature of São Tomé plantations and the centrality of specific plants for these plantation ecologies, there were other human/plant assemblages, that sustained, subverted or ran parallel to plantation goals of production, profit and power. This article zooms into cannabis to explore different relations between plantation working peoples and plantation environments, between suffering, healing, and violence, between labor, pleasure, and power. It will examine how cannabis was part and parcel of the lives of peoples from Angola recruited to São Tomé and, consequently, of the island's plantation worlds in the late nineteenth century. It will also discuss how colonial discourses on cannabis obscured and silenced the presence of this plant in contemporary plantation histories, regardless of its traces in the archive. Cannabis histories are in fact important ones: they counter imperial master narratives by showing how, even under conditions of exploitation, laboring communities and plants co-produced spaces of autonomy, care and leisure.
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