无人机战士:在立岩监视和抵抗的艺术。在哈芬尼弗人类学博物馆展出。普罗维登斯,罗德岛:布朗大学。2018年5月11日- 2019年4月30日

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Museum Anthropology Pub Date : 2019-09-10 DOI:10.1111/muan.12206
J. D. Schnepf
{"title":"无人机战士:在立岩监视和抵抗的艺术。在哈芬尼弗人类学博物馆展出。普罗维登斯,罗德岛:布朗大学。2018年5月11日- 2019年4月30日","authors":"J. D. Schnepf","doi":"10.1111/muan.12206","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Between April 2016 and February 2017, indelible images of police violence against protestors on tribal reservation and unceded lands in Standing Rock, North Dakota, circulated on the national news and social media. The American public bore witness to law enforcement using tear gas, rubber bullets, concussion grenades, and water cannons against protestors as winter temperatures in the region plunged below freezing. These images generated widespread public interest in Energy Transfer Partners’ proposed Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), a $3.8 billion, 1,172-mile-long pipe intended to carry 500,000 barrels of oil per day across the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois. In North Dakota, the construction plans aimed to extend the pipeline upriver from Lake Oahe, the Standing Rock Sioux Nation’s only source of drinking water. The DAPL proposal thus sparked serious concerns about the contemporary state of Indigenous sovereignty, settler colonialism, and environmental racism. Drone Warriors: The Art of Surveillance and Resistance at Standing Rock takes up these concerns by revisiting the actions of the Water Protectors, the Native and non-Native protestors who opposed the proposed DAPL. This informative exhibit highlights how photographic drone operators Myron Dewey, Sean Turgent, Dean Dedman Jr., Brooke Johnson Waukau, and dozens of others turned to drone technology as an innovative response to the pipeline and its defenders. They produced videos and photographs of the pipeline construction and the militarized encampments housing Morton County police, National Guard, and DAPL security forces to document political and environmental transgressions. At the same time, they created powerful images of the landscape and the #NoDAPL Movement to tell their own narrative of the events. Entering the gallery space through the museum’s glass doors, museumgoers are met with tracking shots of theMni Sose, or theMissouri River, on a flat screen televisionmounted on the wall at eye level. To the left, a series of Dewey’s aerial photographs lines the walls, capturing the beauty of “Lakota ancestral lands, herds of bison grazing in the prairie, and the linkages of waterways,” according to a nearby panel. These opening images establish the landscape’s relationship to Indigenous culture as well as its natural beauty. As one moves through the exhibit, a visual story unfolds of this natural world under threat. For example, on other televisions mounted nearby, museumgoers seated on stools can take in aerial video of the buffalo “surrounded by twenty foot deep trenches and razor wire.” To be sure, the narrative of the endangered Lakota lands is a deeply moving one. At the same time, opening the exhibit with images of unpopulated land risks re-inscribing a colonial perspective that ignores the Indigenous communities who inhabit it, seeing it instead as empty and ripe for resource extraction. Perhaps in an effort to dampen this effect, a glass case nearby showcases the rich variety of cultural artifacts born out of the DAPL resistance. These include several posters by Lakota visual artist Gilbert Kills Pretty Enemy III and graphic screen-printed fabric featuring a young Indigenous woman standing with a line of Protectors, her right arm raised in resistance, by Jesus Barraza and Melanie Cervantes. A second case features dreamcatchers crafted by Water Protectors at the Standing Rock Pueblo Camp who cleverly repurposed the concertina wire used by law enforcement to hem in Protectors as the hoop that holds the dreamcatcher webbing taut. Perhaps the most arresting portion of the exhibit is its visual documentation of the #NoDAPL Movement. While the perspective of Elizabeth Hoover’s now iconic photograph of Protectors silhouetted against clouds of illuminated tear gas during the standoff at the Backwater Bridge barricade places the viewer on the ground (Figure 1), the majority of the exhibit’s images use the drone’s aerial perspective to tell the story of the actions from above. One striking photograph captures the standoff between Protectors and Morton County police officers at Turtle Island as a complex interplay of surveillance and countersurveillance: while law enforcement officers clad in museum anthropology","PeriodicalId":43404,"journal":{"name":"Museum Anthropology","volume":"42 2","pages":"150-152"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/muan.12206","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Drone Warriors: The Art of Surveillance and Resistance at Standing Rock. Exhibit at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology. Providence, RI: Brown University. May 11, 2018–April 30, 2019.\",\"authors\":\"J. D. Schnepf\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/muan.12206\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Between April 2016 and February 2017, indelible images of police violence against protestors on tribal reservation and unceded lands in Standing Rock, North Dakota, circulated on the national news and social media. The American public bore witness to law enforcement using tear gas, rubber bullets, concussion grenades, and water cannons against protestors as winter temperatures in the region plunged below freezing. These images generated widespread public interest in Energy Transfer Partners’ proposed Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), a $3.8 billion, 1,172-mile-long pipe intended to carry 500,000 barrels of oil per day across the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois. In North Dakota, the construction plans aimed to extend the pipeline upriver from Lake Oahe, the Standing Rock Sioux Nation’s only source of drinking water. The DAPL proposal thus sparked serious concerns about the contemporary state of Indigenous sovereignty, settler colonialism, and environmental racism. Drone Warriors: The Art of Surveillance and Resistance at Standing Rock takes up these concerns by revisiting the actions of the Water Protectors, the Native and non-Native protestors who opposed the proposed DAPL. This informative exhibit highlights how photographic drone operators Myron Dewey, Sean Turgent, Dean Dedman Jr., Brooke Johnson Waukau, and dozens of others turned to drone technology as an innovative response to the pipeline and its defenders. They produced videos and photographs of the pipeline construction and the militarized encampments housing Morton County police, National Guard, and DAPL security forces to document political and environmental transgressions. At the same time, they created powerful images of the landscape and the #NoDAPL Movement to tell their own narrative of the events. Entering the gallery space through the museum’s glass doors, museumgoers are met with tracking shots of theMni Sose, or theMissouri River, on a flat screen televisionmounted on the wall at eye level. To the left, a series of Dewey’s aerial photographs lines the walls, capturing the beauty of “Lakota ancestral lands, herds of bison grazing in the prairie, and the linkages of waterways,” according to a nearby panel. These opening images establish the landscape’s relationship to Indigenous culture as well as its natural beauty. As one moves through the exhibit, a visual story unfolds of this natural world under threat. For example, on other televisions mounted nearby, museumgoers seated on stools can take in aerial video of the buffalo “surrounded by twenty foot deep trenches and razor wire.” To be sure, the narrative of the endangered Lakota lands is a deeply moving one. At the same time, opening the exhibit with images of unpopulated land risks re-inscribing a colonial perspective that ignores the Indigenous communities who inhabit it, seeing it instead as empty and ripe for resource extraction. Perhaps in an effort to dampen this effect, a glass case nearby showcases the rich variety of cultural artifacts born out of the DAPL resistance. These include several posters by Lakota visual artist Gilbert Kills Pretty Enemy III and graphic screen-printed fabric featuring a young Indigenous woman standing with a line of Protectors, her right arm raised in resistance, by Jesus Barraza and Melanie Cervantes. A second case features dreamcatchers crafted by Water Protectors at the Standing Rock Pueblo Camp who cleverly repurposed the concertina wire used by law enforcement to hem in Protectors as the hoop that holds the dreamcatcher webbing taut. Perhaps the most arresting portion of the exhibit is its visual documentation of the #NoDAPL Movement. While the perspective of Elizabeth Hoover’s now iconic photograph of Protectors silhouetted against clouds of illuminated tear gas during the standoff at the Backwater Bridge barricade places the viewer on the ground (Figure 1), the majority of the exhibit’s images use the drone’s aerial perspective to tell the story of the actions from above. One striking photograph captures the standoff between Protectors and Morton County police officers at Turtle Island as a complex interplay of surveillance and countersurveillance: while law enforcement officers clad in museum anthropology\",\"PeriodicalId\":43404,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Museum Anthropology\",\"volume\":\"42 2\",\"pages\":\"150-152\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.7000,\"publicationDate\":\"2019-09-10\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/muan.12206\",\"citationCount\":\"1\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Museum Anthropology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/muan.12206\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"ANTHROPOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Museum Anthropology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/muan.12206","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

摘要

2016年4月至2017年2月,北达科他州Standing Rock部落保留地和未开垦土地上警察对抗议者施暴的不可磨灭的画面在全国新闻和社交媒体上流传。随着该地区冬季气温骤降至零度以下,美国公众目睹了执法部门对抗议者使用催泪瓦斯、橡皮子弹、震荡手榴弹和高压水枪。这些图像引起了公众对能源转移合作伙伴提出的达科他州接入管道(DAPL)的广泛兴趣,这是一条耗资38亿美元、长1172英里的管道,旨在每天在北达科他州、南达科他州和爱荷华州输送50万桶石油。在北达科他州,建设计划旨在将管道从瓦河湖向上游延伸,瓦河湖是Standing Rock Sioux民族唯一的饮用水来源。因此,DAPL的提案引发了人们对当代土著主权状况、定居者殖民主义和环境种族主义的严重担忧。无人机战士:Standing Rock的监视和抵抗艺术通过重新审视反对拟议DAPL的水保护者、原住民和非原住民抗议者的行动来解决这些问题。这场信息丰富的展览突出了摄影无人机操作员Myron Dewey、Sean Turgent、Dean Dedman Jr.、Brooke Johnson Waukau和其他数十人如何将无人机技术作为对管道及其捍卫者的创新回应。他们制作了管道建设和莫顿县警察、国民警卫队和DAPL安全部队军事化营地的视频和照片,以记录政治和环境违法行为。与此同时,他们创造了强有力的景观和#NoDAPL运动的图像,讲述了他们自己对事件的叙述。通过博物馆的玻璃门进入画廊空间,博物馆观众会在墙上与眼睛齐平的平面电视上看到Mni Sose或密苏里河的跟踪镜头。在左边,一系列杜威的航拍照片排列在墙上,捕捉到了“拉科塔祖先的土地、在大草原上放牧的野牛群以及水道之间的联系”的美丽,据附近的一个小组介绍。这些开放的图像确立了景观与土著文化及其自然美景的关系。当人们在展览中穿行时,一个视觉故事展现了这个受到威胁的自然世界。例如,在附近安装的其他电视上,坐在凳子上的博物馆观众可以拍摄水牛“被20英尺深的战壕和铁丝网包围”的空中视频。可以肯定的是,关于濒危的拉科塔土地的叙述是一个感人的故事。与此同时,以无人居住的土地图像作为展览的开场白,可能会重新塑造一种殖民主义的视角,忽视居住在那里的土著社区,反而认为那里是空的,资源开采的时机已经成熟。也许是为了抑制这种影响,附近的一个玻璃盒子展示了DAPL抵抗运动产生的丰富多样的文物。其中包括拉科塔视觉艺术家Gilbert Kills Pretty Enemy III的几张海报,以及Jesus Barraza和Melanie Cervantes的丝网印刷图案,画中一名年轻的土著妇女与一排保护者站在一起,右臂举起反抗。第二个案例的主角是Standing Rock Pueblo营地的水保护者制作的捕梦者,他们巧妙地将执法部门用来将保护者卷起来的手风琴线重新用作拉紧捕梦者织带的环箍。也许展览中最引人注目的部分是它对#NoDAPL运动的视觉记录。伊丽莎白·胡佛(Elizabeth Hoover)现在的标志性照片《保护者》(Protectors)在回水桥(Backwater Bridge)路障对峙期间的剪影将观众放在地上(图1),而展览的大多数图像都使用无人机的空中视角从上方讲述行动的故事。一张引人注目的照片捕捉到了保护者和莫顿县警察在海龟岛的对峙,这是监视和反监视的复杂相互作用:而执法人员则穿着博物馆人类学的衣服
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
Drone Warriors: The Art of Surveillance and Resistance at Standing Rock. Exhibit at the Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology. Providence, RI: Brown University. May 11, 2018–April 30, 2019.
Between April 2016 and February 2017, indelible images of police violence against protestors on tribal reservation and unceded lands in Standing Rock, North Dakota, circulated on the national news and social media. The American public bore witness to law enforcement using tear gas, rubber bullets, concussion grenades, and water cannons against protestors as winter temperatures in the region plunged below freezing. These images generated widespread public interest in Energy Transfer Partners’ proposed Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), a $3.8 billion, 1,172-mile-long pipe intended to carry 500,000 barrels of oil per day across the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois. In North Dakota, the construction plans aimed to extend the pipeline upriver from Lake Oahe, the Standing Rock Sioux Nation’s only source of drinking water. The DAPL proposal thus sparked serious concerns about the contemporary state of Indigenous sovereignty, settler colonialism, and environmental racism. Drone Warriors: The Art of Surveillance and Resistance at Standing Rock takes up these concerns by revisiting the actions of the Water Protectors, the Native and non-Native protestors who opposed the proposed DAPL. This informative exhibit highlights how photographic drone operators Myron Dewey, Sean Turgent, Dean Dedman Jr., Brooke Johnson Waukau, and dozens of others turned to drone technology as an innovative response to the pipeline and its defenders. They produced videos and photographs of the pipeline construction and the militarized encampments housing Morton County police, National Guard, and DAPL security forces to document political and environmental transgressions. At the same time, they created powerful images of the landscape and the #NoDAPL Movement to tell their own narrative of the events. Entering the gallery space through the museum’s glass doors, museumgoers are met with tracking shots of theMni Sose, or theMissouri River, on a flat screen televisionmounted on the wall at eye level. To the left, a series of Dewey’s aerial photographs lines the walls, capturing the beauty of “Lakota ancestral lands, herds of bison grazing in the prairie, and the linkages of waterways,” according to a nearby panel. These opening images establish the landscape’s relationship to Indigenous culture as well as its natural beauty. As one moves through the exhibit, a visual story unfolds of this natural world under threat. For example, on other televisions mounted nearby, museumgoers seated on stools can take in aerial video of the buffalo “surrounded by twenty foot deep trenches and razor wire.” To be sure, the narrative of the endangered Lakota lands is a deeply moving one. At the same time, opening the exhibit with images of unpopulated land risks re-inscribing a colonial perspective that ignores the Indigenous communities who inhabit it, seeing it instead as empty and ripe for resource extraction. Perhaps in an effort to dampen this effect, a glass case nearby showcases the rich variety of cultural artifacts born out of the DAPL resistance. These include several posters by Lakota visual artist Gilbert Kills Pretty Enemy III and graphic screen-printed fabric featuring a young Indigenous woman standing with a line of Protectors, her right arm raised in resistance, by Jesus Barraza and Melanie Cervantes. A second case features dreamcatchers crafted by Water Protectors at the Standing Rock Pueblo Camp who cleverly repurposed the concertina wire used by law enforcement to hem in Protectors as the hoop that holds the dreamcatcher webbing taut. Perhaps the most arresting portion of the exhibit is its visual documentation of the #NoDAPL Movement. While the perspective of Elizabeth Hoover’s now iconic photograph of Protectors silhouetted against clouds of illuminated tear gas during the standoff at the Backwater Bridge barricade places the viewer on the ground (Figure 1), the majority of the exhibit’s images use the drone’s aerial perspective to tell the story of the actions from above. One striking photograph captures the standoff between Protectors and Morton County police officers at Turtle Island as a complex interplay of surveillance and countersurveillance: while law enforcement officers clad in museum anthropology
求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
Museum Anthropology
Museum Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
75.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Museum Anthropology seeks to be a leading voice for scholarly research on the collection, interpretation, and representation of the material world. Through critical articles, provocative commentaries, and thoughtful reviews, this peer-reviewed journal aspires to cultivate vibrant dialogues that reflect the global and transdisciplinary work of museums. Situated at the intersection of practice and theory, Museum Anthropology advances our knowledge of the ways in which material objects are intertwined with living histories of cultural display, economics, socio-politics, law, memory, ethics, colonialism, conservation, and public education.
期刊最新文献
Silencing the past: Power and the production of history By Michel‐RolphTrouillot, Boston: Beacon Press. 1995 Issue Information The “saint” of Livingstonia: Assembling, memorializing, and representation of missionary paraphernalia at the Stone House Museum in Malawi Diversity and philanthropy at African American museums: Black Renaissance By Patricia A. Banks, London and New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group. First Published 2019 by Routledge. pp. 212. ISBN: 9780367730093 (pbk), ISBN: 9780815349648 (hbk), ISBN: 9781351164368 (ebk) An artists' reflection of her First Civil Rights Tour
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1