Читать книгу A Decolonial Ecology - Malcom Ferdinand - Страница 2

Table of Contents

Оглавление

Cover

Series Title

Title Page

Copyright Page

Table of Ships

List of Illustrations

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Foreword – Angela Y. Davis Notes

10  Prologue: A Colonial and Environmental Double Fracture A modern tempest Noah’s ark or the colonial and environmental double fracture The slave ship or modernity’s hold A world-ship: the world as a horizon for ecology Reaching the eye of the tempest Notes

11  Part I The Modern Tempest: Environmental Violence and Colonial Ruptures

12  1 Colonial Inhabitation: An Earth without a World Principles of colonial inhabitation: geography, exploitation of nature, and othercide Foundations of colonial inhabitation: land grabs, massacres, and land clearing Forms of colonial inhabitation: private property, plantations, and slavery Notes

13  2 The Matricides of the Plantationocene The end of a nourishing earth: from conucos to plantations The ecumenal rupture: a “land-without-manman Ruptures in the landscape, biodiversity, and metabolic exchange From colonial inhabitation to the Plantationocene Notes

14  3 The Hold and the Negrocene Hold politics The refusal of the world Destruction of community ties and affiliations Loss of body, loss of Earth Off-polis: the engineering of a non-political being The specificity of the condition of enslaved Negresses The Negrocene Notes

15  4 The Colonial Hurricane The colonial hurricane Shakespeare and Césaire: when the tempest serves the masters’ interests Conrad and Katrina: when the tempest creates the world’s holds Turner and the Zong: the pretext-tempest for throwing the world overboard The politics of the colonial hurricane and global warming Notes

16  Part II Noah’s Ark: When Environmentalism Refuses the World

17  5 Noah’s Ark: Boarding, or the Abandonment of the World Noah’s ark: an imaginary of environmentalist discourse Boarding politics Loss-bodies Astronauts on Earth Abandoning the world: the Noahs Figures of the world’s refusal Notes

18  6 Reforestation without the World (Haiti) Technocentric discourse and the off-world Unjustly blaming Maroons and peasants Reforestation without the world; or, the sacrifice of peasants The parc de la Visite massacre of July 23rd, 2012 At the origin: colonial inhabitation and the Maroon fracture of the world World-making to reforest the Earth Notes

19  7 Paradise or Hell in the Nature Preserves (Puerto Rico) Paradise: a colonial laboratory Vieques: paradisiacal nature reserve or hell Colonial heterotopia The violence of the blank page Notes

20  8 The Masters’ Chemistry (Martinique and Guadeloupe) The toxic condition of the Plantationocene Chlordecone in the French Antilles: toxic forms of violence and domination A toxic power grab that strengthens colonial inhabitation The masters’ chemistry and the lie of an astronaut-humanity Notes

21  9 A Colonial Ecology: At the Heart of the Double Fracture Slave-making ecology: environmentalism under the condition of slavery Plantationary emancipation: an abolition of slavery on the condition of the plantation A fracture between anticolonialism and modern environmentalism The Anthropocene’s colonial oikos The Negroes of the colonial oikos The Anthropocene’s hold Notes

22  Part III The Slave Ship: Rising Up from Modernity’s Hold in Search of a World

23  10 The Slave Ship: Debarking Off-World The slave ship: the imaginary ark of the Caribbean world Debarkation politics Lost bodies The shipwrecked: off-Earth The Negro: off-world Figures of the flight from the world: rising up from the hold Notes

24  11 Maroon Ecology: Fleeing the Plantationocene Marooning the Anthropocene At the heart of modernity’s double fracture Touching Earth: Maroon matrigenesis Creole metamorphosis: recovering a self, discovering a body The Maroon’s ecology: protectors of the forests The Maroonesses Limits and virtues Notes

25  12 Rousseau, Thoreau, and Civil Marronage John Muir in Cuba: breaking the wall of environmentalism Rousseau or the Maroon walker Thoreau cut in two Thoreau, defender of the Maroons The enslaved to Black enslavement: the other people enslaved by the Plantationocene Civil marronage Civil Maroonesses and the White women against slavery A civil marronage from the Plantationocene Notes

26  13 A Decolonial Ecology: Rising Up from the Hold From the colonial fracture to the environmental fracture From the environmental fracture to the colonial fracture Unsettling the Anthropocene: the Ayiti hypothesis Decolonial ecology’s struggles: rising up from the modern hold Notes

27  Part IV A World-Ship: World-Making beyond the Double Fracture

28  14 A World-Ship: Politics of Encounter Noah’s ark and the slave ship: two wanderings of the same modernity The environmentalist return: continuing the colonial refusal of the world Maroon returns: pursuit of the infinite flight from the world Politics of encounter and the world-ship Notes

29  15 Forming a Body in the World: Reconnecting with a Mother-Earth The fracture of the two bodies The bellies of the world and the wombs of the Earth Healing Negro bodies and ecological bodies Blowing the conch and playing the drum Notes

30  16 Interspecies Alliances: The Animal Cause and the Negro Cause The enslavement of non-human animals The social and political animalization of Black and other racialized people Being prey in the concrete jungle Racism and the animalization of women One slave-making inhabitation of the Earth Interspecies alliances against the Plantationocene Notes

31  17 A Worldly-Ecology: On the Bridge of Justice World-making, composing with pluralities Beyond gestalt ontology and creolization For doubly relational aesthetics and writing For a cosmopolitics of relation On the bridge of justice: climate justice, reparations, and decolonial restitutions Notes

32  Epilogue: World-Making in the Face of the Tempest World-making The intrusion of Ayiti Recovering the sun of Africa Notes

33  Index

34  End User License Agreement

A Decolonial Ecology

Подняться наверх