郁郁葱葱的后果:郊区的种族、劳工和景观

IF 2.9 1区 社会学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Environment and Planning D-Society & Space Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1177/02637758231172202
E. Crane
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章在一个不太可能的地方——大迈阿密的农业郊区——讲述了战后的劳动力和风景。在霍姆斯特德,土著玛雅移民在焦土反叛乱工作期间和之后在观赏植物和棕榈苗圃中流离失所,使美国的小区和院子里充满了翠绿的植物。这些繁盛的植物产生并稳定了全国各地的郊区房产制度。通过对苗圃工人、业主、社区组织者和郊区开发商的田野调查,这篇文章提出了一个问题:什么在战争后生长?我展示了国家认可的暴力、种族化和财产之间的纠缠如何在战争正式结束后产生了一种有利可图但又有害的环境秩序——我称之为“郁郁葱葱的后果”。通过与移民正义运动的合作思考,这一郁郁葱葱的后果的概念阐明了美国帝国内部和外部战争如何跨国地产生国内景观。
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Lush aftermath: Race, labor, and landscape in the suburb
This article takes up labor and landscape in the wake of war in an unlikely place: an agricultural suburb of Greater Miami. In Homestead, Indigenous Maya migrants displaced during and after scorched earth counterinsurgency work in ornamental plant and palm nurseries, filling U.S. subdivisions and yards with verdant plant life. These flourishing plants produce and stabilize suburban property regimes across the country. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with nursery workers and owners, community organizers, and suburban developers, this article asks: what grows after war? I show how the entanglement of state-sanctioned violence, racialization, and property produces a lucrative and injurious environmental order that emerges after war’s formal end—what I call a lush aftermath. Thinking collaboratively with migrant justice movements, this conception of a lush aftermath illuminates how domestic landscapes are transnationally produced through inner and outer wars of U.S. empire.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: EPD: Society and Space is an international, interdisciplinary scholarly and political project. Through both a peer reviewed journal and an editor reviewed companion website, we publish articles, essays, interviews, forums, and book reviews that examine social struggles over access to and control of space, place, territory, region, and resources. We seek contributions that investigate and challenge the ways that modes and systems of power, difference and oppression differentially shape lives, and how those modes and systems are resisted, subverted and reworked. We welcome work that is empirically engaged and furthers a range of critical epistemological approaches, that pushes conceptual boundaries and puts theory to work in innovative ways, and that consciously navigates the fraught politics of knowledge production within and beyond the academy.
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