存在性恢复:通过讲述地理故事重新创造和记忆

IF 0.9 4区 社会学 Q2 CULTURAL STUDIES Cultural Studies-Critical Methodologies Pub Date : 2024-05-06 DOI:10.1177/15327086241249155
Cristina Mislán
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这个项目中,我通过对生活在我的家乡路易斯安那州南部的黑人居民和环保活动家进行非结构化采访,收集他们的生活故事。我重点介绍了三段深入的叙事,以说明在种族化社区中讲述地理故事是如何培养我所说的生存恢复能力的。我将黑人生态学、记忆研究和地理叙事的学术研究相互交叉,认为存在性恢复传达了一种环境正义,将牺牲区变成了神圣的 "黑人归属空间"。从这些叙事中,我们看到那些居住在 "无人之地 "的人们正在进行记忆工作--回忆过去,重新创造种植园的未来。当居民和活动家抵制那些使他们的地理环境 "无法生存 "的结构时,他们帮助塑造了在环境灾难下生活的意义。对环境种族主义话语抵抗的关注强调了有色人种社区如何重新构建和重新认识适应环境和气候危机的意义。
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Existential Recovery: Re-making and Remembering Through Geo-Storytelling
This article draws from a larger auto-ethnographic project in which I have collected life stories via unstructured interviews with Black residents and environmental activists living in southern Louisiana, my hometown. I highlight three in-depth narratives to illustrate how geo-storytelling within racialized communities cultivates what I call existential recovery. Intersecting scholarship in Black ecology, memory studies, and geo-storytelling, I argue that existential recovery communicates a form of environmental justice that turns sacrifice zones into sacred “Black spaces of belonging.” From these narratives, we see that those who inhabit “lands of no-one” are practicing memory-work—remembering pasts and re-making plantation futures. As residents and activists resist those structures that render their geographies “unlivable,” they help shape what it means to live under environmental disaster. A focus on discursive resistance to environmental racism then emphasizes how communities of color re-frame and re-claim what it means to adapt under environmental and climate crises.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
16.70%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: The mandate for this interdisciplinary, international journal is to move methods talk in cultural studies to the forefront, into the regions of moral, ethical and political discourse. The commitment to imagine a more democratic society has been sa guiding feature of cultural studies from the very beginnnig. Contributors to this journal understand that the discourses of a critical, moral methodology are basic to any effort to re-engage the promise of the social sciences and the humanities for democracy in the 21st Century. We seek works that connect critical emanicipatory theories to new forms of social justice and democratic practice are encouraged.
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