Future rivers of the Anthropocene or whose Anthropocene is it? Decolonising the Anthropocene!

被引:0
作者
Hayman, Eleanor [1 ]
James, Colleen [2 ]
Wedge, Mark [3 ]
机构
[1] Carcross Tagish First Nation, Heritage Lands & Nat Resources, Carcross, YT, Canada
[2] Carcross Tagish First Nation, Daklaweidi Clan Wolf Moiety, Carcross, YT, Canada
[3] Carcross Tagish First Nation, Deisheetaan Clan Crow Moiety, Carcross, YT, Canada
来源
DECOLONIZATION-INDIGENEITY EDUCATION & SOCIETY | 2018年 / 7卷 / 01期
关键词
Decolonising; Tlingit; Tagish; glaciers; Anthropocene; climate change;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The Tlingit and Tagish First Nation peoples of the circumpolar north celebrate a rich, sophisticated, 9,000 year old storytelling culture. The Tlingit and Tagish consider themselves "part of the land, part of the water," within which is the recognition and respect for the sentience of glaciers, rivers, lakes, trees, salmon and other animals. This paper focuses on glaciers within the context of the Anthropocene and other colonial terracentric histories maintained by the dominant mono-cultural imaginary. How might thinking with glaciers, powerful agents in the forging of human and more-than-human identities, work to address new types of climate change realities? Looking at decolonizing realities through place-name and counter-mapping work with Carcross/Tagish First Nation, we showcase and question the rhetoric of the Anthropocene. We suggest that the "slow activism" and "narrative ecologies" embedded within Tlingit and Tagish glacial narratives have the ability to disrupt increasingly entrenched notions and narrow definitions of the Anthropocene(s) that continue to reproduce this mono-cultural imaginary.
引用
收藏
页码:77 / 92
页数:17
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