Naturecultural Permutations

The greedy and unstoppable bulldozer of runaway globalisation has led to unprecedented economic growth in the world since the 1990s, but at a cost. Local realities, practices and knowledges are being smothered, and ecosystems worldwide are becoming more homogeneous, less unique, less diverse. This s...

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Main Author: Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Gothenburg 2023-05-01
Series:Parse Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://parsejournal.com/article/naturecultural-permutations/
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author Thomas Hylland Eriksen
author_facet Thomas Hylland Eriksen
author_sort Thomas Hylland Eriksen
collection DOAJ
description The greedy and unstoppable bulldozer of runaway globalisation has led to unprecedented economic growth in the world since the 1990s, but at a cost. Local realities, practices and knowledges are being smothered, and ecosystems worldwide are becoming more homogeneous, less unique, less diverse. This story can be told in many ways, and the author studies it using tools from globalisation theory, anthropology and biosemiotics to understand the loss of biological and cultural diversity simultaneously, seeing them as two sides of the same coin. This ethnographic fiction tells a version of this story from the perspective of Tommy, a research fellow at the Stellenbosch Institute of Advanced Study (STIAS), who grapples with the issue and its paradoxes through his encounters with the Stellenbosch botanical garden, the fraught and conflictual realities of post-apartheid South Africa and—not least—a younger fellow at the Institute with whom he develops an uneasy relationship. Through her personal war against boundaries and purity, Serenity (formerly known as Karin) challenges Tommy’s views on diversity, arguing that mixing and volatility can be a creative force in promoting new forms of diversity. The celebration of tradition and uncontaminated ecosystems can resemble apartheid, and Serenity prefers “staying with the trouble”, as Donna Haraway puts it. The dilemmas remain unsolved, but Tommy grudgingly has to concede that Serenity, who has reinvented herself as a coloured woman, may represent a healthy and realistic form of contamination that builds bridges rather than blowing them up.
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spelling doaj.art-2d78216188864b51a9a2fdfa068aba4e2023-06-27T06:43:39ZengUniversity of GothenburgParse Journal2002-05112002-09532023-05-01Conviviality and Contamination16Naturecultural PermutationsThomas Hylland Eriksen0University of OsloThe greedy and unstoppable bulldozer of runaway globalisation has led to unprecedented economic growth in the world since the 1990s, but at a cost. Local realities, practices and knowledges are being smothered, and ecosystems worldwide are becoming more homogeneous, less unique, less diverse. This story can be told in many ways, and the author studies it using tools from globalisation theory, anthropology and biosemiotics to understand the loss of biological and cultural diversity simultaneously, seeing them as two sides of the same coin. This ethnographic fiction tells a version of this story from the perspective of Tommy, a research fellow at the Stellenbosch Institute of Advanced Study (STIAS), who grapples with the issue and its paradoxes through his encounters with the Stellenbosch botanical garden, the fraught and conflictual realities of post-apartheid South Africa and—not least—a younger fellow at the Institute with whom he develops an uneasy relationship. Through her personal war against boundaries and purity, Serenity (formerly known as Karin) challenges Tommy’s views on diversity, arguing that mixing and volatility can be a creative force in promoting new forms of diversity. The celebration of tradition and uncontaminated ecosystems can resemble apartheid, and Serenity prefers “staying with the trouble”, as Donna Haraway puts it. The dilemmas remain unsolved, but Tommy grudgingly has to concede that Serenity, who has reinvented herself as a coloured woman, may represent a healthy and realistic form of contamination that builds bridges rather than blowing them up.https://parsejournal.com/article/naturecultural-permutations/ethnographic fictionglobalisationhomogenisationloss of biological and cultural diversity
spellingShingle Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Naturecultural Permutations
Parse Journal
ethnographic fiction
globalisation
homogenisation
loss of biological and cultural diversity
title Naturecultural Permutations
title_full Naturecultural Permutations
title_fullStr Naturecultural Permutations
title_full_unstemmed Naturecultural Permutations
title_short Naturecultural Permutations
title_sort naturecultural permutations
topic ethnographic fiction
globalisation
homogenisation
loss of biological and cultural diversity
url https://parsejournal.com/article/naturecultural-permutations/
work_keys_str_mv AT thomashyllanderiksen natureculturalpermutations