{"title":"阿米塔夫·高希《肉豆蔻的诅咒》中的认知正义与去殖民化","authors":"Goutam Karmakar, R. Chetty","doi":"10.1177/09716858231185614","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Amitav Ghosh’s The Nutmeg’s Curse (2021) is an insightful deliberation on the layered inequities and asymmetries created by the intersection of colonialism and anthropogenic activities. In The Nutmeg’s Curse, Ghosh conceives the present-day climate and ecological crisis as fallouts of colonial thinking and its manifestations in dominant epistemic and ethical constructions. This article underscores Ghosh’s critique of the Eurocentric discourses for their instrumentality in producing the totalitarian binaries of human and non-human, in which the ‘human’ was always the whites and the ‘non-human’ comprised all ‘others’—the non-whites, indigenous people, nature and ecology. In attributing agency and signifying authority to the white capitalist, this dualistic thinking has always conceived of the ‘others’ as non-humans—those who could be objectified, commodified and tampered with. This article explores how Ghosh repudiates this colonialist monolithic demarcation, which, in compliance with the discourse of the Anthropocene, had annihilated non-Western forms of signification, knowledge and ethics. The article focuses on how the systemic othering of Western modernity’s episteme had been incremental, leading to occurrences of ‘testimonial injustices’ and ‘hermeneutical injustices’—which had culminated in severe forms of epistemicide and unleashed, what Boaventura de Sousa Santos terms ‘cognitive injustice’—relegating indigeneity and ecology to precarious conditions. In accordance with this, this article argues that Ghosh envisages a critical necessity to dismantle the matrix of Western capitalist modernity and its associated narrative of the Anthropocene and claims for a conceptualization of decolonial ecological ethics that would prioritize an encompassing of the episteme produced by the ‘other’. An engagement with the indigenous voices and a restoration of non-Western modes of knowledge production are crucial, as they can offer new ethical dimensions to envision ecology and life with its multiplicities and facilitate ‘cognitive justice’ for the oppressed and unrepresented ‘other’.","PeriodicalId":44074,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Human Values","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-07-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Cognitive (In)justice and Decoloniality in Amitav Ghosh’s The Nutmeg’s Curse\",\"authors\":\"Goutam Karmakar, R. Chetty\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/09716858231185614\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Amitav Ghosh’s The Nutmeg’s Curse (2021) is an insightful deliberation on the layered inequities and asymmetries created by the intersection of colonialism and anthropogenic activities. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
阿米塔夫·高希的《肉豆蔻的诅咒》(2021)对殖民主义和人类活动交叉产生的分层不平等和不对称进行了深刻的思考。在《肉豆蔻的诅咒》中,高希认为当今的气候和生态危机是殖民思想的产物,并在占主导地位的认知和伦理建构中表现出来。本文强调了高希对欧洲中心主义话语的批判,因为它们在制造人类和非人类的极权主义二元对立中发挥了工具作用,其中“人类”总是白人,而“非人类”包括所有“他人”——非白人、土著人民、自然和生态。在将代理和象征权威归于白人资本家时,这种二元思维总是将“他者”视为非人类——那些可以被物化、商品化和篡改的人。本文探讨了高希是如何否定这种殖民主义的单一划分的,这种划分符合人类世的话语,已经消灭了非西方形式的意义、知识和伦理。这篇文章关注的是西方现代性知识的系统性异化是如何逐渐增加的,导致了“证言的不公正”和“解释性的不公正”的发生——最终导致了严重形式的知识灭绝,并释放了Boaventura de Sousa Santos所说的“认知的不公正”——将土著和生态降级到不稳定的状态。据此,本文认为高希设想了拆除西方资本主义现代性矩阵及其与人类世相关的叙事的关键必要性,并主张将非殖民化的生态伦理概念化,优先考虑由“他者”产生的知识。与土著声音的接触和非西方知识生产模式的恢复是至关重要的,因为它们可以提供新的伦理维度来设想生态和生活的多样性,并促进被压迫和未被代表的“他者”的“认知正义”。
Cognitive (In)justice and Decoloniality in Amitav Ghosh’s The Nutmeg’s Curse
Amitav Ghosh’s The Nutmeg’s Curse (2021) is an insightful deliberation on the layered inequities and asymmetries created by the intersection of colonialism and anthropogenic activities. In The Nutmeg’s Curse, Ghosh conceives the present-day climate and ecological crisis as fallouts of colonial thinking and its manifestations in dominant epistemic and ethical constructions. This article underscores Ghosh’s critique of the Eurocentric discourses for their instrumentality in producing the totalitarian binaries of human and non-human, in which the ‘human’ was always the whites and the ‘non-human’ comprised all ‘others’—the non-whites, indigenous people, nature and ecology. In attributing agency and signifying authority to the white capitalist, this dualistic thinking has always conceived of the ‘others’ as non-humans—those who could be objectified, commodified and tampered with. This article explores how Ghosh repudiates this colonialist monolithic demarcation, which, in compliance with the discourse of the Anthropocene, had annihilated non-Western forms of signification, knowledge and ethics. The article focuses on how the systemic othering of Western modernity’s episteme had been incremental, leading to occurrences of ‘testimonial injustices’ and ‘hermeneutical injustices’—which had culminated in severe forms of epistemicide and unleashed, what Boaventura de Sousa Santos terms ‘cognitive injustice’—relegating indigeneity and ecology to precarious conditions. In accordance with this, this article argues that Ghosh envisages a critical necessity to dismantle the matrix of Western capitalist modernity and its associated narrative of the Anthropocene and claims for a conceptualization of decolonial ecological ethics that would prioritize an encompassing of the episteme produced by the ‘other’. An engagement with the indigenous voices and a restoration of non-Western modes of knowledge production are crucial, as they can offer new ethical dimensions to envision ecology and life with its multiplicities and facilitate ‘cognitive justice’ for the oppressed and unrepresented ‘other’.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Human Values is a peer-reviewed tri-annual journal devoted to research on values. Communicating across manifold knowledge traditions and geographies, it presents cutting-edge scholarship on the study of values encompassing a wide range of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences. Reading values broadly, the journal seeks to encourage and foster a meaningful conversation among scholars for whom values are no esoteric resources to be archived uncritically from the past. Moving beyond cultural boundaries, the Journal looks at values as something that animates the contemporary in its myriad manifestations: politics and public affairs, business and corporations, global institutions and local organisations, and the personal and the private.