Restoring environments as the making of a new world

Restoring environments as the making of a new world

Week 12: Rethinking restoration as reconstruction

Ryan Schram
ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world
Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Slides available at https://anthro.rschram.org/1002/2024/12.2

Main reading: Barra (2024)

What is happening in Plaquemines Parish?

The landscape of this environment is “semi-solid, semi-liquid” (Barra 2024, 151).

The total land available is shrinking, and this area may need to be flooded so that other areas can stay dry.

Two ideologies of restoration

The plantation and the plot

A plantation is an example of and metaphor for the colonial dispossession of land and its transformation

The plantation system does not completely transform the land in which it exists. It is shadowed by a distinct alternative, the plot (Wynter 1971, 99–100; see also McKittrick 2013, 10–11)

Plots sustain plantations, but also contain the potential to escape from them

Are you concerned about cultural continuity?

In the article by Monique Barra we read this week, she argues that Ironton people’s approach to restoration is a “practice of cultural continuity” (Barra 2024, 153):

Many of the Black coastal communities I worked with were similarly steeped in histories of autonomous worldmaking deeply rooted to local ecologies that shaped their approach to coastal restoration. Compared to frameworks of restoration predicated on land loss and natural processes, many Black community leaders in Plaquemines Parish approach questions about land and future of Plaquemines around the past—specifically through invocations of holding land across generations of kin over time. (Barra 2024, 153)

She also writes,

Potawatomi scholars Kyle Powers Whyte and Robin Kimmerer suggest ecological repair is a cultural practice that mends and strengthens relations between human and nonhuman kin across time. Whyte calls this as “collective continuance:” the practice of (re)establishing restorative relations between humans and the environment through ecological practices. Collective continuance refers to relations of interdependence, responsibility, and care for the social resilience of Indigenous peoples, cultures, and the environment as they shift and evolve over time. (Barra 2024, 154)

How do you interpret the idea of cultural continuity here?

Should anthropologists seek to understand the basis for people’s cultural continuity?

Here is a Padlet for your thoughts: https://sydney.padlet.org/ryanschram/what-does-cultural-continuity-mean-nxgik12cpp3jl7ap

Adapting to climate change is an opportunity to destroy plantations and build plots

We can use the conceptual distinction between plantation and plot as a metaphor for two different responses to climate change.

We can also connect the idea of the plot to a radical form of social change.

References and further reading

Barra, Monica Patrice. 2024. “Restoration Otherwise: Towards Alternative Coastal Ecologies.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 42 (1): 147–65. https://doi.org/10.1177/02637758221146179.

Luke, Nikki, and Nik Heynen. 2020. “Community Solar as Energy Reparations: Abolishing Petro-Racial Capitalism in New Orleans.” American Quarterly 72 (3): 603–25. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/765825.

McKittrick, Katherine. 2013. “Plantation Futures.” Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism 17 (3 (42)): 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-2378892.

Ritchie, Andrea, and Marbre Stahly-Butts, eds. 2019. “Reparations Now Tool Kit.” Movement for Black Lives. https://m4bl.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Reparations-Now-Toolkit-FINAL.pdf.

Wynter, Sylvia. 1971. “Novel and History, Plot and Plantation.” Savacou 5 (June): 95–102. https://trueleappress.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/wynter-novel-and-history-plot-and-plantation-first-version-1971.pdf.

 

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