Record Details

Nature on the Move II: Contemplation Becomes Speculation

New Proposals: Journal of Marxism and Interdisciplinary Inquiry

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Field Value
 
Title Nature on the Move II: Contemplation Becomes Speculation
 
Creator Igoe, Jim
 
Subject Anthropology; Geography; Political Ecology; Environmental Studies; Marxism
Nature, Conservation, Spectacle, Fetishism, Governmentality
 
Description As the second installation of this triptych, this essay addresses the broader historical trajectories and cultural manifestations of Nature on the Move. In it I argue that recent forms of nature for speculation are discursively and visually rooted in an older, and more widely recognized, nature for contemplation. As it emerged alongside the industrial revolution, nature for contemplation already embodied qualities amenable to the production of a moving commodity nature: forgetting, abstraction, reification, and exchangeability. At the same time, however, it was popularly presented as immutable, immovable, and beyond capitalist value production. It took a great deal of cultural and intellectual labor for this nature's proto-commodity qualities to be realized and presented as a fait accompli. This has been achieved in large part by the mediation of relationships by images, or what Guy Debord (1995[1967]) called spectacle. "As the indispensable decoration of objects as the are produced today," (ibid: thesis 15) spectacle provides the aesthetic articulation for what I call "eco-functional nature" -- a nature that appears as though it can be moved around to optimize ecosystem health and economic growth. Production of this seemingly unassailable vision happens at a diversity of interconnected sites, where it is also often vigorously opposed. These constitute the micro-political milieus of decentered and apparently unrelated struggles over what nature is and what nature will be.
 
Publisher New Proposals Publishing Society
 
Contributor Dartmouth College, UK Social Science and Humanities Research Council
 
Date 2012-11-24
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
research-article
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/183691
 
Source New Proposals: Journal of Marxism and Interdisciplinary Inquiry; Vol 6, No 1-2 (2013); 37-49
1715-6718
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/183691/184344
 
Coverage East Africa, North America, Western Europe
Late 19th Century to Present