在灾难、去殖民化和衍射时代,爱情的革命性可能性

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY Geographical Research Pub Date : 2023-07-25 DOI:10.1111/1745-5871.12614
Clare M. Mouat
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引用次数: 1

摘要

爱的表现形式出现在许多学科和话语领域,这些学科和话语领域应该与地理对话。地理学家必须从事艰巨但有价值的任务,将爱的不同表现形式提炼成我们迫切需要的再生干预措施。这些干预需要对爱进行地理上的解释,以推动激进的研究、教学法、政策和实践,在整个生命历程和生活世界中产生直接和间接的影响。这些工作是由国家和法律、交叉关系或神经科学来调解的,并涉及到爱如何保证关键的基础设施——地点(制造)、关怀和纠缠、殖民主义、人类世和后人类的人与自然关系——这些基础设施导致了我们所寻求的繁荣未来。面向这些任务的丰富的地理研究仍然面临着将差异扁平化的指责。这篇评论选取了这个议程的一个方面:地理研究中的一个盲点,这个盲点与基于仁爱的爱的伦理必要性有关。相反,我支持地理学为政策、教学和实践提供信息的革命性可能性,通过基于与社会重要性相一致的另类的爱,重申可获取的科学是社会和系统变革的有效驱动力。具体来说,我主张对灾难、去殖民化和衍射时代的爱情进行再生的社会政治分析。
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Revolutionary possibilities of love in a time of disaster, decolonisation, and diffraction

Representations of love appear across many disciplines and discursive fields that are and should be in conversation with geography. It is imperative that geographers engage in formidable but worthy tasks to distil diverse renderings of love into the regenerative interventions we urgently need. Those interventions require geographically minded interpretations of love to drive radical research, pedagogies, policies, and practices in ways that have direct and indirect effects across the life course and life worlds. Such labours are mediated by state and law, by intersectional relations, or by neuroscience, and involve asking how love underwrites critical infrastructures—of place (making), care and entanglements, colonialism, and human-nature relations in the Anthropocene and posthuman—that lead to the flourishing futures we seek. Rich geographical studies oriented to those tasks still face charges of flattening difference. This commentary picks up one aspect of this agenda: a blind spot in geographical research relating to the ethical imperative to love based on benevolence. Instead, I champion the revolutionary possibilities for geography to inform policies, pedagogies, and practices by using a love based on alterity aligned with social weight, reasserting accessible science as an effective driver of social and system transformative changes. Specifically, I argue for a regenerative socio-political analytic of love in a time of disaster, decolonisation, and diffraction.

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