土壤、种子和玫瑰:阿根廷大豆前沿种植园的余生

Tamar Blickstein
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摘要

在阿根廷查科--世界上农业综合企业驱动的毁林热点地区--20 世纪在土著土地和劳动力上建立人工棉花种植园的欧洲定居者(外国佬)的后裔,后来被 "大豆热潮 "所取代。尽管如此,种植园的遗产仍然存在于这些参与者今天的种族化植物关系中,存在于他们对农业综合企业的矛盾--而且往往是默许--态度中。本文借鉴 "种植园世 "的新兴理论,研究了三位定居者对话者如何对大豆农业综合企业所取代的植物世界的消失感到悲伤,重点关注活土、棉花种子和盆栽玫瑰。我表明,这些对多物种的依恋具有双重作用:一方面,它们使这些参与者敏感地认识到大豆热潮带来的生态后果,另一方面,它们也强化了定居者殖民种植园的种族化进步逻辑,最终使他们默许了这种农业综合企业模式。
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Soil, Seeds, and Roses: Plantation Afterlives in an Argentine Soybean Frontier
In the Argentine Chaco — a world hotspot of agribusiness-driven deforestation — descendants of European settlers ( gringos) who built manual cotton plantations on Indigenous land and labor in the twentieth century, have since been displaced from farming by the “soy boom.” Nevertheless, plantation legacies persist in the racialized plant-relations of these actors today, and in their conflicted — and often acquiescent — attitudes to agribusiness. Drawing on emergent theories of the “Plantationocene,” this essay examines how three settler interlocutors grieve the loss of plant-worlds that soy agribusiness has displaced, with a focus on living soil, cotton seeds, and potted roses. I show that these multispecies attachments perform a double role: while they sensitize these actors to the ecological fallouts of the soy boom, they also reinforce settler colonial plantation logics of racialized progress that ultimately feed their acquiescence to that agribusiness model.
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