Invitation to register for: ‘Grassroots political responses to agrarian conflicts and environmental degradation in the South East Asian Anthropocene’ St Catharine’s College, University of Cambridge (Hybrid) 18th – 20th April 2023

When:

18 April 2023

Where:

St Catharine's College, Cambridge (Hybrid)

We are delighted to announce that registration for our next hybrid conference, ‘Grassroots political responses to agrarian conflicts and environmental degradation in the South East Asian Anthropocene’ (St Catharine’s College, University of Cambridge, 18th – 20th April 2023), is now open. The conference will include presentations by an interdisciplinary range of scholars based in and beyond Southeast Asia, and the following keynotes:

Siti Maimunah (Passau University) & Rebecca Elmhirst (University of Brighton)Extractivisms and response-ability: Practicing a politics of connection through Tubuh Tanah Air

and

Saturnino (Jun) Borras (ISS, TNI)Scholar-activism and agrarian struggles

In person attendees should email; Candie Furber (cf364@cam.ac.uk) to register their interest.

Online attendees should follow the instructions below to register via Zoom:

Please register via this link https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcqd-yprz8sHt2FXoY5Oww6gow82Q2wuJvT.

This will be hosted on the Zoom account of our project, The Global Lives of the Orangutan, so this name may appear in your inbox.

Please find programme here.

Call for Papers: ‘Grassroots Political Responses to Agrarian Conflicts and Environmental Degradation in the Southeast Asian Anthropocene’

When:

18 April 2023
18th - 20th April 2023

Where:

University of Cambridge

In line with calls to ‘provincialise’ the Anthropocene (DeLoughrey 2019), this conference aims for a contextual analysis of the fault lines and fragmentations of the Southeast Asian Anthropocene and its political mobilisations. We approach this endeavour through a reflexive analysis of grassroots political responses to environmental degradation and the closely linked issue of agrarian conflicts in the region.

Southeast Asia is rich in natural resources, has high biodiversity, and fertile agricultural lands. However, over the last century, the region has seen the increasing depletion of these resources and environmental degradation through infrastructure projects, extractivism, deforestation, plantations, agricultural intensification, and enclosure. As a result, an increasing number of agrarian conflicts between farmers, fisherfolk, and foragers, on the one hand, and state and business actors, on the other hand, have emerged. State actors are often actively invested in these processes in the name of national development and economic growth and facilitate corporate access to natural resources. Developmental narratives often build on an insufficient understanding of local practices that are deemed inefficient or environmentally harmful and are regarded by many state and civil society actors to necessitate technical knowledge transfer. The ensuing “political economy of ignorance” (Dove 1985) has depoliticising effects and contributes to agrarian conflicts as it legitimises external interventions, enclosure, and ‘green grabbing’ (cf. Balmford/Green/Phalan 2012; Eilenberg 2021; Fairhead/Leach/Scoones 2012). At the same time, the socio-economic effects of climate change from human-made greenhouse gas emissions are becoming increasingly noticeable in agrarian production from horticulture to fisheries (Borras Jr. et al. 2021). With Moore (2015), we can regard these various developments broadly as Anthropocenic ‘problem spaces’.

Throughout Southeast Asia, (grassroots) political struggles have emerged that engage with these developments in a variety of ways. The responses range from negotiation and compromise, over strategic co-optation, to outright rejection and contestation (e.g. Li 2007; McCarthy & Robinson 2016). Sometimes, political movements and NGOs form regional, national, or transnational coalitions, such as during the 2018 Global Land Forum in Bandung, and shortly after the World Bank/IMF annual meeting in Bali. While climate change in particular and environmental degradation more broadly have long been regarded by local civil society actors as an elite concern, an increasing number of political struggles have come to address either of them as central to agrarian livelihoods, as the current legal case of the inhabitants of Pari Island (Indonesia) against the cement giant HOLCIM vividly illustrates. However, such grassroots political involvement often contains considerable economic, political, or epistemological risks for participants.

This interdisciplinary conference seeks to comparatively discuss activist and civil society responses to Anthropocenic problem spaces and which moral, economic, ecological, and political concerns motivate them. We aim to develop an analytical focus on the relationship between these different motivations, such as between environmental and agrarian concerns, particularly as they play out on the ground in Southeast Asian contexts. This will entail questions of responsibility (Chua et al. 2021) and justice (Wolf/Zenker 2022). Thinking through these issues will illuminate the ways in which the Anthropocene is encountered, navigated, and transformed through grassroots politics in Southeast Asia.

We invite abstracts for paper contributions from social anthropology, sociology, geography, political science, development studies, and neighbouring disciplines that provide insights into

  • political contestations around responsibility, accountability, and justice in the context of the Southeast Asian Anthropocene
  • local and larger-scale fault lines of agrarian conflicts, including potential links or frictions between agrarian-economic concerns and environmentalism
  • aims, strategies, and methods of grassroots activism and broader civil society coalitions responding to environmental degradation and agrarian conflicts
  • the relationship of grassroots activists to (international) NGOs and formal politics, and legal institutions
  • the nature of the relationship between scholarship and activism on the Southeast Asian Anthropocene, concerning ethical dilemmas and questions of responsibility

Details

The conference will be held in hybrid format with options both for in-person and online participation. Please submit your abstract (max. 250 words), including your name, affiliation, and indication of whether you’re planning to present in person or remotely by 13 January 2023 to Sophia Hornbacher-Schönleber (smh93@cam.ac.uk). We welcome submissions from early career scholars and have limited funds available to support their participation. If you wish to be considered for a grant of £ 500 to £ 1,000, please indicate this as well as your approximate travel costs in your application email.

Visualizing environmental change and crisis: a conversation – webinar – 27th September 2022 12.00 GMT (Zoom)

When:

27 September 2022
12.00 GMT

Where:

Zoom

Registration: https://cam-ac-uk.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0scO6hqTsrEtW0HN-LdDL4TGanaco8x4st  

Download poster below

 

Visualizing environmental change and crisis: a conversation

 

27 September 2022, 12:00 GMT (Zoom)

Registration: https://cam-ac-uk.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0scO6hqTsrEtW0HN-LdDL4TGanaco8x4st  

 

How can anthropologists visually represent environmental change and crisis? What methods, relations, temporalities, ethical concerns and representational devices do these processes involve? How does the digital exhibition format shape the nature of anthropological research and exchange? In this webinar, the curators of two digital exhibitions – Orangutan In/visibilities and The changing ways of life and environments of the local communities (Indonesian Borneo and Papua New Guinea) – will share their experiences and discuss these and other questions in conversation with each other.

Further notes

Orangutan In/visibilities is a digital exhibition curated by the Global Lives of the Orangutan and POKOK projects at Brunel University London and the University of Cambridge. It seeks to push beyond orangutan-centric visualisations of orangutan conservation and to illuminate the (often unseen) human and nonhuman structures and processes that shape this global network. What, it asks, does orangutan conservation look like when it does not centre the orangutan? And how might tracing its in/visibilities prompt us to reimagine both human-orangutan relations and conservation itself? Team members: Liana Chua, Hannah Fair, Viola Schreer, Paul Hasan Thung, Anna Stępień.

The changing ways of life and environments of the local communities is an online exhibition curated by the research project New Regimes of Commodification and State Formation on the Resource Frontier of Southeast Asia (https://blogs.helsinki.fi/sea-state/ – funded by Kone Foundation) at the University of Helsinki. The exhibition aims to visualise the shifting relationships and interactions between corporations, state and local people, especially from the perspective of local life. In the photographs, different scales and perspectives unravel the complex and shifting processes of state formation that involve people, nature species, beings, and various state institutions in the areas that the state often consider distant and marginal. Exhibition group members: Anu Lounela, Tuomas Tammisto, Anna-Mari Ahonen, Rifky, Agus Kusnadi, Heikki Wilenius.

In the Shadow of the Palms: More-than-Human Becomings on the West Papuan Plantation Frontier

When:

11 May 2022
5-6.30pm

Where:

Arts School Lecture Theatre A + on Zoom

In the Shadow of the Palms: More-than-Human Becomings on the West Papuan Plantation Frontier

A book talk by Sophie Chao, featuring responses from Maan Barua (Geography), Liana Chua (Social Anthropology/Malay World Studies) and Rupert Stasch (Social Anthropology)

Hosted by The Global Lives of the Orangutan (Department of Social Anthropology), the Tunku/Malay World Studies research community (St Catharine’s College) and Centre for South Asian Studies

11 May 2022 – 5.00-6.30 pm

Arts School Lecture Theatre A (link to map here)  + on Zoom (register at https://tinyurl.com/2pab54f4)

In this talk, Dr Sophie Chao will draw on her forthcoming book, In the Shadow of the Palms: More-Than-Human Becomings in West Papua (Duke University Press, 2022) to explore how Indigenous Marind communities in the Indonesian-controlled province of West Papua understand and navigate the social, political, and environmental demands of the oil palm plant. Situating the recent proliferation of oil palm plantations in West Papua within the context of the region’s volatile history of colonisation, ethnic domination, and capitalist incursion, Sophie Chao will trace how Marind attribute environmental destruction not just to humans, technologies, and capitalism, but also to the volition and actions of the oil palm plant itself. By approaching cash crops as both drivers of destruction and subjects of human exploitation, she will problematise violence as a more-than-human act, while centering how Marind fashion their own changing worlds and foreground Indigenous creativity and decolonial approaches to anthropology.

Please download poster here

 Biography

Dr Sophie Chao is Discovery Early Career Research Award (DECRA) Fellow and Lecturer in Anthropology at The University of Sydney. Her research investigates the intersections of Indigeneity, ecology, capitalism, health, and justice in the Pacific. Sophie Chao previously worked for the human rights organization Forest Peoples Programme in Indonesia, supporting the rights of forest-dwelling Indigenous peoples to their customary lands, resources, and livelihoods. For more information, please visit www.morethanhumanworlds.com.

 

‘Heroes and Villains in the Anthropocene’ Virtual Seminar series. Spring – Autumn 2021

When:

Spring -Autumn 2021

Where:

Virtual Event

We are delighted to announce our Virtual Seminar series; ‘Heroes and Villains in the Anthropocene’, organised as part of the ‘Refiguring Conservation in/for ‘the Anthropocene: The Global Lives of the Orangutan’ project (ERC Starting Grant no. 758494, https://globallivesoftheorangutan.org) at Brunel University London.  Please find the full programme below. Seminars will be held in Spring – Autumn 2021.

The seminars will be held via Zoom at 1-2pm UK time (see full programme for dates). A registration link will be released on Twitter and via email shortly before each event. If you would like to receive regular Zoom details via email, please email candida.furber@brunel.ac.uk

See below for recordings of seminars if you couldn’t attend.

Conference Programme

7 April 2021

 Love or disgust: One Butterfly, Two Worlds?

 Columba Gonzalez-Duarte (Mount Saint Vincent University Halifax)

View recording here

This paper explores the theme of heroes and villains in the context of conserving the North American monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus). The monarch butterfly is a migratory insect that travels across Canada, The United States and Mexico, performing a 4000-km migration. By completing this migration, the at-risk insect connects and disconnects humans, revealing tensions of a North/South dichotomy across geographies and the different actors participating in the insect’s survival. In the ‘North,’ the conservation strategy relies on the voluntary work of ‘butterfly amateurs’ who recreate monarch habitat, rear the insect at home, and often contribute economically and affectively to habitat protection. In the ‘South,’ the conservation model is experienced as a top-down imposition restricting land use and traditional livelihoods; these are people who suffer and contest nature-trespassers’ labels and carry the political weight of conserving a disappearing insect. Based on ethnographic data collected with these two often opposed conservation communities, I explore the heroes’ and villains’ dynamic around ontological questions. What happens when actors co-living with the same organism have radically opposed ideas of what a butterfly is or the form it should live? My exploration of one insect, two worlds intersects with the ‘many worlds’ and one planet debate (Viveros de Castro 2014; Abramson and Holbraad 2014, recently Latour’s biennial exhibit) in a postcolonial context (Todd 2016). In this way, by exploring the tension of these opposed yet co-produced communities, the paper explores how a disappearing butterfly confronts essential perceptions of nature in a moment of unquestionable crisis.

Abramson, Allen, and Martin Holbraad, eds. 2014. Framing Cosmologies: The Anthropology of Worlds. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Todd, Zoe. 2016. “An Indigenous Feminist’s Take On The Ontological Turn: ‘Ontology’ Is Just Another Word For Colonialism: An Indigenous Feminist’s Take on the Ontological Turn.” Journal of Historical Sociology 29 (1): 4–22. https://doi.org/10.1111/johs.12124.

Viveros de Castro, Eduardo Batalha Viveiros de. 2014. Cannibal Metaphysics: For a Post-Structural Anthropology. Edited by Peter Skafish. First edition. Univocal. Minneapolis, MN: Univocal.

Columba Gonzalez-Duarte holds a Ph.D. in sociocultural anthropology at the University of Toronto with a joint degree at the School of Environment. After graduation in 2019, Dr. Gonzalez-Duarte gained a postdoctoral fellowship at the Department of Geography and Planning of the University of Toronto and the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity. She recently started a position as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Mount Saint Vincent University, in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Her research interests are related to monarch butterfly tri-national conservation dynamics exploring the connections between NAFTA’s agri-food industry, labour migration, and monarch decline. She has also worked with scientific and Indigenous communities that co-habit with this butterfly across Canada, the United States and Mexico documenting their knowledge and forms relating to the migratory insect. Columba is currently working on her research project, “Convergent Migrations,” and finishing a book based on her doctoral research.

 

28 April 2021

 On Parasites and Commensals. Stories of Ambivalent Potato Companionships across Anthropocene Spaces and Times

Olivia Angé (Université libre de Bruxelles)

View recording here

 This talk presents stories of potato-human companionship in four disparate ecological settings. They are selected to give sense of contrasted tuberous historical protagonism, outlining shifting anthropocene figures of parasites and commensals. First, I delve into Andean stories accounting for potato strategic contribution to the expansion of the Inca empire, and to the resistance against colonial invasion. Secondly, I follow potato journey towards the old world, to highlight the vital participation of Tuberosum species to the Industrial Revolution; and their subsequent deadly devastation when the proliferation of Phytophthora infestans across north European monocrop fields provoked a tragic famine. The third story brings us back to the Andean centre of domestication, where a Potato Park was settled at the turn of the 21st century to implement tuberous agrobiodiversity conservation campaigns. Curating more than 1300 native varieties, local cultivators have become internationally renowned conservation heroes; while still being stigmatised as wretched Indians in other contexts. The fourth scene unfolds in East Africa, where agribusiness magnates are working to release a late blight resistant cisgenic variant of the South American Victoria variety; raising accusations of biopiracy and ecological menace. All in all, these transhistorical vignettes of tuberous heroism and villainy revisit recent scholarship about the creation of moral examples, in light of a multispecies ethnography.

Olivia Angé is an Associate Professor at the Université Libre de Bruxelles, and the principal investigator of the ERC Starting Grant Flourishing Seeds. She specialises in the study of economic exchanges, agriculture and prosperity in the Andes. Since 2014 she has been doing research on potato agrobiodiversity in Peru. She has also performed extensive fieldwork on barter fairs in the Argentinean cordillera. She is the author of Barter and Social Regeneration in the Argentinean Andes (Berghahn, 2018), and co-editor of Ecological Nostalgias and Anthropology and Nostalgia (Berghahn, 2014 and 2021).

 

19 May 2021

 Indigenous Peoples and their Role as “Bearers of Hope” in the Anthropocene: Critical Reflections from Indonesian Borneo

Michaela Haug (University of Cologne)

View recording here

Current debates around the Anthropocene emphasise the close interconnections between humans and all other beings on this planet. They reflect the notion that the ecological crisis largely stems from a globally dominant, “Western” or “modern” worldview, while stimulating a renewed interest in indigenous conceptualisations of the world (Knauß 2018, Sprenger forthcoming). In a context, where the desire for alternative ways of relating to the world is omnipresent, as for example mirrored by the recent works of Donna Haraway (2016) and Anna Tsing (2015), indigenous cosmologies are looked at in a hopeful light, echoing romanticized representations of indigenous peoples as natural born environmentalists. Their “non-modern”, “non-Western” or “animist” ways of relating to the world are seen as possessing a “radical alterity” that contains transformative potential (Hage 2015, Wergin 2018). Building on my long term fieldwork among the Dayak Benuaq, an indigenous group of Indonesian Borneo, I critically reflect on this role of indigenous peoples as “bearers of hope” in the Anthropocene. I foreground the great ambiguity with which individuals and communities perceive, cause, and resist environmental change. Demonstrating the Dayak Benuaq’s multi-layered relationship to the forest, I leave the common dichotomy between a “modern” and an “animist” worldview behind and show how Dayak Benuaq practices of engaging with the forest differ depending on the situation and reflect different ontological assumptions. I conclude my talk by reflecting on the “transformative potential” that can emerge from indigenous conceptualisations of the world, especially where we do not suspect it and when we see them not as blueprints for developing socio-ecological alternatives that will save us from ecological collapse, but as an encouragement to follow genuinely new paths.

Hage, G. 2015. Alter-Politics: Critical Anthropology and the Radical Imagination. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.

Haraway, D. J. 2016. Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene. Durham, N.C.: Duke University.

Knauß, S. 2018. Conceptualizing Human Stewardship in the Anthropocene: The Rights of Nature in Ecuador, New Zealand and India. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 31: 703-722.

Sprenger, G. forthcoming. Can Animism Save the World? Reflections on Personhood and Complexity in the Ecological Crisis. Sociologus.

Tsing, A. L. 2015. The Mushroom at the End of the World. On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.

Wergin, C. 2018. Collaborations of Biocultural Hope: Community Science against Industrialisation in Northwest Australia. Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology 83 (3): 455-472.

Michaela Haug is Assistant Professor at the Department for Social and Cultural Anthropology and Senior Researcher at the Global South Studies Centre at the University of Cologne, Germany. She focuses on environmental anthropology, rural transformations, social inequality, and gender relations with a regional focus on Southeast Asia. Her current research project Future-Making, Environmental Change and Socio-economic Transformations in East Kalimantan, Indonesia explores how different and partly contradicting visions of the future affect forest use changes in Indonesian Borneo. Recent publications include the article Claiming Rights to the Forest in East Kalimantan: Challenging Power and Presenting Culture, published in SOJOURN (2018), a Special Issue on Translating Climate Change: Anthropology and the Travelling Idea of Climate Change in Sociologus, co-edited together with Sara de Wit and Arno Pascht (2018), and a Special Issue on Frontier Temporalities in Paideuma, co-edited with Kristina Großmann and Timo Kaartinen (2020).

 

9 June 2021 ***CANCELLED***

 All heroes and all villains.  Remarks from rabies in India and COVID-19 in Italy

Deborah Nadal (University of Glasgow)

As a medical anthropologist, I spent 2020 working on dog-mediated rabies in India and observing how people in Italy, my home country, understood and experienced the current pandemic. Both rabies and COVID-19 are diseases of animal origin, yet differ in many aspects: 99.9% lethal yet slow to spread, through animal bites, the first; quick to jump from person to person, yet asymptomatic for most, the second. Despite this vast difference, particularly regarding transmission dynamics and rates, we can observe a common pattern, namely the reluctance to accept that we are all in this (infectious relationship) together. This translates into the difficulty to resist the temptation of blaming others for disease spreading and, consequently, to be willing to feel and be part of the solution. This paper will reflect on camaraderie – inter-species camaraderie in the case of rabies, inter-community camaraderie in the case of COVID-19 – as a possibly useful concept, or even ideal, to survive and navigate healthily through the Anthropocene.

Deborah Nadal is a cultural and medical anthropologist specialised in South Asia. Her main areas of interest are health and illness and the human-animal relation, but she mostly enjoys working at their intersection. She is particularly interested in zoonotic diseases, One Health, discrimination in cross-species health, veterinary anthropology, and multispecies ethnography. As a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow, she is currently carrying out a project on the local transmission dynamics and understandings of dog-mediated rabies in rural Western India. Her project is hosted at the Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine of the University of Glasgow, UK, and the Center for One Health Research of the University of Washington, USA. She has recently published her first monograph, titled “Rabies in the Streets. Interspecies Camaraderie in Urban India” (2020, Penn State University Press).

 

21 July 2021

 Anthropocene atmospheric animals: Ruminations with climate cattle

Jonathon Turnbull, Catherine Oliver & Adam Searle

(University of Cambridge)

View recording here

A young boy sings a country song whilst walking through a set filled with cut-out cows burping and farting: “so to change emissions, Burger King went on a mission, testing diets that will help reduce their farts.” In this recent advert, Burger King promises that by altering cattle diets — meddling with their metabolism — consumers can continue to enjoy their burgers at a lower environmental cost.

Cattle bodies have become sites of climate governance: metabolic manipulations have become a way to produce climate heroes — ‘good cows’ for the ‘good Anthropocene’ — whilst other cattle are constructed as villainous climate-destroyers whose metabolic processes are undesirable and unsuited for Anthropocene agriculture.

Attention to metabolism unites seemingly disparate geographical scales – the molecular and the planetary – in which bovine metabolisms have become the site at which the climate itself is engineered. In this seminar, we draw on expert interviews and media and scientific discourse analyses to understand how cattle overflow the Anthropocene hero/villain binary. In addition to altering cattle diets, we explore how recent advances in synthetic biology and gene-editing technologies aimed at reducing cattle methane emissions are foregrounding the genome as a site of climate contestation.

More-than-human metabolic and genomic experiments, we suggest, do little to challenge human exceptionalism; relying on technofix visions that fetishise underlying agro-environmental problems associated with capitalism. However, they do open avenues to consider the experiences, contestations, and negotiations of the Anthropocene at the metabolic and genomic scale.

Jonathon Turnbull a cultural and environmental geographer whose current research explores the human–animal relations and weird ecologies of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, with a focus on dogs and wolves. In addition, building on his previous research on the bovine geographies of India’s sacred cattle, he writes on human-bovine relations in the Anthropocene. He also has ongoing projects investigating the live-streaming of urban peregrine falcons, human-nature relations during quarantine, and digital encounter value.

Adam Searle is a cultural and environmental geographer interested in the relationships between humans, other animals, and technologies. His recent research project concerned the cloning of extinct animals, and upcoming work focuses on the use of genetic engineering in agriculture and conservation.

Catherine Oliver is a geographer and postdoctoral researcher, currently working with ex-commercial laying hens and their keepers in London as part of the ERC-funded project Urban Ecologies at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge. She completed her PhD on veganism in Britain at the University of Birmingham in 2020. Catherine is also a Royal Geographical Society Wiley Digital Archive Fellow, exploring animals as workers, collaborators, in conflicts and in mapping in the Society’s archives.  

 

29 September 2021

 Autonomy and culpability on a Malaysian plantation: the case of the Batek

Alice Rudge (University College London)

View recording here

When attributing blame is avoided, who can be made culpable for Anthropocenic environments? Batek hunter-gatherers of Peninsula Malaysia avoid attributing culpability for perceived wrongdoings, blame is seen as an infringement of autonomy. Even when someone has done something perceived as wrong, it is said that they are ‘on their own’: one cannot know their intentions. The other-than-human persons of their forest are also considered autonomous – they are said to ‘live on their own’. Thus, autonomy is part of multispecies co-existence.

But among Anthropocene landscapes, as many Batek turn to plantation labour, they say the oil palms that they encounter cannot ‘live on their own’. Because they are planted they are dependent, they lack autonomy. How, then, to live, work, and act among them? Might they therefore be blamed for environmental harms?

To answer this question, this talk will explore the relationship between autonomy, dependency, and culpability. It will argue that through careful cultivation of autonomy in the face of environmental destruction, people find strategies for living in Anthropocenic realities that move beyond a quest to attribute culpability to Others. This challenges both the paradigm of the environmental hero who points the finger of blame, and the figure of the suffering, helpless victim of environmental crimes that so often pervade representations of Indigenous peoples.

Alice Rudge is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow in the Department of Anthropology at UCL. Her current research is on language, plants and human ethics in the Anthropocene, and she conducts long-term ethnographic fieldwork with Batek people in Peninsular Malaysia. Recent writings can be found in American Ethnologist and Journal of Linguisitic Anthropology.

 

20 October 2021

War of the Island Kings:

Hydropower, Spirits and Ontological Crises on the Mekong

Andrew Alan Johnson (University of California)

Watch recording here

This year, the Mekong River forever changed, as hydropower projects in Laos and China altered the river’s ebb and flow to a trickle. New floods tore through villages, followed by record lows as dam controllers closed floodgates. Entire species of fish vanished. On the bank where I have conducted research from 2015-2019, Lao-speaking Thai fishermen on the river watched as their livelihoods drastically changed.

But what could be done? Fishermen retaliated with protests and public awareness campaigns where such political actions were possible, but they also marshalled older allies on the Mekong: spirits of islands and river features that had historically been guarantors of progress. But as animist “island kings” were called upon to advocate for an end to reckless hydropower projects, their role shifted – some mediums echoed the despair felt by their devotees, others sent curses to the dam controllers, others stonily echoed bureaucratic talking points, others gave up the trade or changed their retinue of spirits entirely.

Here, via looking at the Anthropocene through the lens of Thai-Lao spirit practices, I argue that the Anthropocene becomes a crisis that extends across epistemological horizons, impacting not only ecology and economy, but cosmology and ontology as well.

Andrew Alan Johnson is a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the University of California-Berkeley. He has previously served as an Assistant Professor at Yale-NUS College and at Princeton University and received his Ph.D. from Cornell in May of 2010. His research looks at how individuals reshape their worlds in the wake of economic and environmental disaster. He has two books – Ghosts of the New City (2014), a study of abandoned buildings as a crisis of urbanity in Chiang Mai, and Mekong Dreaming (2020), a look at how dams across the main stream of the Mekong River reconfigures how fishermen live with fish, the great river itself, international migrant labour, and the spirits of the river.

 

10 November 2021

In search for fire villains: blame and wilful blindness in Indonesia’s peatlands

Viola Schreer (Brunel University London)

This paper explores how Bornean villagers experience and engage with peatland fires that haunt the island almost every year, causing regional air pollution, detrimental health effects, tremendous economic costs, and environmental impact on a global scale. In the midst of choking, noxious “haze”, the search for fire villains (penjahat Karhutla) takes centre stage: Who or what caused the blaze? Blame and speculation proliferate.

Examining local and international fire discourses, I ask what Anthropocenic ideas are mobilized to establish causation, attribute blame, and identify fire figures (Feuergestalten)? As I will show, for villagers living with recurrent fires the Anthropocenic reasoning adopted by governments, media, and non-governmental organisations have little meaning, but the fires and their politics raise much more concrete concerns about food security, land tenure, and culpability. In the face of serious livelihood pressures and imminent criminalisation, the claims of governments and NGOs can only be contested, fragmented, and even ignored to confront blame and accusation. In Indonesia’s peatlands, wilful blindness has become a means to live in and with an Anthropocenic reality and relate to its forces.

By exploring how Bornean villagers engage with an Anthropocenic formation, its discourses, knowledge, and politics, this paper not only reveals the disparities within the fire nexus, but provides much-needed empirical grounding of the Anthropocene and its diverse effects.

Viola Schreer is a postdoc researcher at the Department of Anthropology at Brunel University London. Her main research interests are human-environment relations, livelihoods, hope, development, and conservation with an ethnographic focus on Borneo. As part of the ERC project Refiguring Conservation in/for ‘the Anthropocene’: The Global Lives of the Orangutan, she currently studies a community conservation scheme in Indonesian Borneo to explore the manifold ways, in which Anthropocenic phenomena are experienced, conceptualized, and negotiated by the projects diverse actors. Recent publications can be found in Ethnos and People & Nature.

 

1 December 2021

Tibetan Medicine, Conservation and Covid-19 in the Anthropocene: Diagnosing the Spiritual Revenge of Nature?

Jan van der Valk (University of Vienna)

During the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic in Asia, Tibetan medicine (Sowa Rigpa) rapidly emerged as a key interface through which practitioners and patients of Tibetan, Himalayan and diasporic communities interpreted and responded to the origins and spread of the virus. Apart from a host of preventative, protective and curative measures – ranging from mantras and amulets to multi-compound pills – the root causes for Covid’s sudden appearance and devastation were also framed through the interrelated lenses of Tibetan medical etiology, Buddhist morality and indigenous conceptions of spiritual ecology. Drawing on idioms of contagion, spirit provocation and karmic retribution, Tibetan physician-scholars highlight the correspondence between moral and environmental pollution in a “degenerate age” (Sanskrit: kaliyuga) characterized by natural calamities, epidemics, and apocalyptic societal collapse, evoking a kind of revenge of nature instigated by angered protectors of the Sky and the Earth. In this paper, I analyze this diagnostic narrative from the perspective of Max Haiven’s (2020) Revenge Capitalism: The Ghosts of Empire, the Demons of Capital, and the Settling of Unpayable Debts. I aim to evaluate the ways in which the moral ecological vengeance introduced above (re)distributes blame and agency, and to what extent it may constitute a productive critique of and mobilizing force within the anthropocene.

Jan van der Valk is a scholar-practitioner trained in the fields of biology, ethnobotany, anthropology, and Tibetan Studies. Since his doctoral dissertation (University of Kent, 2017), Jan has mainly focused on the techniques and material processes that transform natural substances into Tibetan medical formulas by working with pharmacy experts in India and Nepal. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher in the project “Potent Substances in Sowa Rigpa and Buddhist Rituals” at University of Vienna (https://www.univie.ac.at/potent-substances/).

 

PDF version of programme below:

Heroes and Villains in the Anthropocene

When:

Spring and Summer 2021

Where:

Virtual Event

The Anthropocene – the proposed designation for a new geological epoch defined by human activity and a powerful encompassing conceptual framework in itself – evokes various human and non-human figures, such as zombies (Povinelli 2016), ghosts and monsters (Tsing et al. 2017), as well as victims, heroes, and villains. In the face of accelerating extinctions, deepening social and ecological crisis, and anthropogenic impact on a geological scale, questions of blame, responsibility, and victimhood (Rudiak-Gould 2015) take centre stage: Who or what is to blame for the mess we are in? Who and what will suffer? And who or what can bring salvation?  Answers to these questions abound. Visions of the Great Anthropocene (AsafuAdjaye 2015) present a last chance for Anthropos’ heroism to shine through,while the idea of symbiogenesis (Haraway 2016) challenges humans’ exceptional status and urges us write ‘stories without human heroes’ (Tsing 2015: 155). Other scholars deconstruct humanity as a universalizing figure altogether (Malm and Hornborg 2014), highlighting the villainy of capitalist systems of commodification (Moore 2016) and colonial violence (Davis and Todd 2017). At the same time, endangered charismatic megafauna, evoking sentimentality, sympathy and awe (Lorimer 2015), are positioned as blameless victims in need of conservation heroes to save them from extinction, while local people entangled in human-wildlife conflict often get demonised (Lustrum 2017). Indigenous people, in particular, are frequently portrayed as either environmental heroes or irresponsible villains of ecological degradation (Sletto 2015).

Meanwhile during the COVID19 pandemic, the virus as anti-hero has arisen as a new Gestalt of our time, with bats (Pereira et al 2020), MAIT cells (Haeryfar 2020), and other non-human animals and insect hosts and vectors being discussed as ‘epidemic villains’ (Lynteris 2019), and the epidemiologist celebrated as cultural hero (Lynteris 2016). Alongside these new figures hopeful visions of resurgent natures have emerged (Searle and Turnbull 2020), often paired with a misanthropic denunciation of humanity as duly punished.  What other human and non-human figures does the Anthropocene provoke? What insights do these bring to our understanding of Anthropocenic realities? And what further nuance is needed to look beyond the commonly evoked hero-villain binary (Ashby 2020) to explore how the Anthropocene is experienced, contested, and negotiated across multiple settings?

We invite proposals for presentations to contribute to a virtual seminar series on ‘Heroes and Villains in the Anthropocene’ (Spring and Summer 2021). Organised as part of the Refiguring Conservation in/for ‘the Anthropocene’: The Global Lives of the Orangutan project (ERC Starting Grant no. 758494, https://globallivesoftheorangutan.org/) at Brunel University London, this series aims to bring together scholars from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and at all stages of their career in an ongoing conversation that – we hope – will culminate in a writing workshop in Autumn 2021 (virtual or in person, depending on the conditions) and a joint publication afterwards. Presentations should last up to 40 minutes, and can take different formats (as long as they work virtually).
Please submit an abstract of ~200 words by January 4th 2021 to Hannah Fair (hannah.fair@brunel.ac.uk) and Viola Schreer (viola.schreer@brunel.ac.uk). We expect decisions to be made by January 15th 2021.

See PDF here 

References
Asafu-Adjaye, J., Blomquist, L., Brand, S., Brook, B.W., DeFries, R., Ellis, E., Foreman, C.,
Keith, D., Lewis, M., Lynas, M. and Nordhaus, T. 2015. An ecomodernist manifesto.
Ashby, J. 2020. ‘Telling the Truth About Who Really Collected the “Hero Collections”.
Telling the Truth About Who Really Collected the “Hero Collections”.
Davis, H. & Z. Todd 2017. On the importance of a date, or decolonizing the Anthropocene. ACME:
An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 16(4): 761-80.
Haeryfar, S. M. M. 2020. MAIT Cells in COVID-19: Heroes, Villains, or Both? Critical Reviews™ in
Immunology 40(2): 173-84.
Haraway, D. J. 2016. Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene. Durham, N.C.: Duke
University.
Lunstrum, E. 2017. Feed them to the lions: Conservation violence goes online. Geoforum, 79: 134-
43.
Lynteris, C. 2016. The Epidemiologist as Culture Hero: Visualizing Humanity in the Age of “the
Next Pandemic”. Visual Anthropology 29(1): 36-53.
Lynteris, C. (ed.) 2019. Framing Animals as Epidemic Villains Histories of Non-Human Disease
Vectors.
Malm, A. and A. Hornborg 2014. The geology of mankind? A critique of the Anthropocene narrative.
The Anthropocene Review 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/2053019613516291.
Moore, J. (ed.) 2016. Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature, history and the crisis of capitalism. Oakland: PM Press.
Pereira, M. J. R., E. Bernard, and L. M. S. Aguiar 2020. Bats and COVID-19: villains or victims?
Biota Neotropica, 20(3). http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1676-0611-bn-2020-1055.
Povinelli, E. 2016. Geontologies: A Requiem to Late Liberalism. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
Rudiak-Gould, P. 2015. The social life of blame in the Anthropocene. Environment & Society 6,
48-65.Searle, A. and Turnbull J. 2020. Resurgent natures? More-than-human perspectives on COVID19. Dialogues in Human Geography 10(2): 291-95.
Sletto, B. I. 2005. A swamp and its subjects: conservation politics, surveillance and resistance
in Trinidad, the West Indies. Geoforum 36(1): 77-93.
Tsing, A. L. 2015. The Mushroom at the End of the World. On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.
Tsing, A. L., H. Swanson, E. Gan, and N. Bubandt (eds.) 2017. Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Conservation and the social sciences: Beyond critique and co-optation workshop

When:

Where:

King’s College, University of Cambridge

Interactions between conservation and the social sciences have frequently been characterised by either critique (of conservation by social scientists) or co-optation (of social scientific research by conservationists). This workshop invites conservationists and social scientists to move beyond these dominant frames by exploring new forms of dialogue and collaboration between the two fields. It asks: What might the conservation/social science interface look like if it wasn’t built around critique or co-optation? How might new collaborations and dialogues reshape existing paradigms, frameworks and values in both fields? How can conservationists and social scientists adapt and transform their methods in engagement with each other? What can we gain from these forms of collaboration and dialogue?

Panels will consist of short interventions (10-15 minutes) on specific themes and questions, followed by general discussions between presenters and other participants. In keeping with the theme of our project, the workshop focuses on the interface between orangutan conservation and social anthropology – but it also aims to raise questions and explore possibilities that resonate with wider debates across conservation and the social sciences.

Read more in this report…

View Programme

Programme

9.00-9.30: Welcome and registration

9.30-9.45: Introductory remarks: Liana Chua

Panel 1: Conservation and the social sciences

9.45-10.00: Cristina Eghenter (WWF Indonesia)

The Circle Game: Towards the co-evolution of social sciences and conservation

10.00-10.15: Raj Puri (Centre for Biocultural Diversity, University of Kent)

An Anthropological View of Conservation Culturomics

10.15-10.30: Mark Harrison et al. (Borneo Nature Foundation)

Perspectives on Moving from an Ecologically Orientated to an Integrated Approach for Orangutan Conservation in Kalimantan

10.30-10.45: Alexandra Palmer (University of Oxford)

The Anthropology of Conservationists: Beyond Neo-Colonialism and Neo-Liberalism

10.45-11.15: Coffee and Discussion

Panel 2: New media and technologies

11.30-11.45: Serge Wich (Liverpool John Moores University)

Creating a Shared Visualization for Conservation in a Landscape Approach

11.45-12.00: Bill Adams (University of Cambridge)

Digital Animals and the Conservation Imagination

 12.00-12.15: Susan M. Cheyne et al. (Borneo Nature Foundation)

Communicating Conservation: From Direct Education to Social Media and Outreach Engagement in Kalimantan, Indonesia

12.15-12.30: Sol Milne (University of Aberdeen)

Role of Citizen Science in Analysis of Aerial Orangutan Nest Surveys and Public Outreach for Orangutan Conservation

12.30-1.00: Discussion

1.00-2.00: Lunch

Panel 3: Challenging orthodoxies: new alliances and narratives

2.00-2.15: Erik Meijaard (Borneo Futures)

Rethinking Orangutan Conservation in the Anthropocene

2.15-2.30: Viola Schreer (Brunel University London)

Hope in Orangutan Conservation?

2.30-2.45: Panut Hadisiswoyo (Orangutan Information Centre)

TBC

2.45-3.00: June Rubis (University of Oxford)

Seeing The Utan From The Orang: Field-Notes From a Recovering Conservationist

3.00-3.30: Coffee and discussion 

Closing plenary and discussion

3.45-5.15

With reflections by Bram Büscher (Wageningen University) and Helen Schneider (Fauna & Flora International)

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