In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku

Capitalist society relies on the liberal notion of atomistic individuals carrying distinct personal and property rights. These ideas are reflected in common sense as well as in bourgeois law, but they fall apart the second you start to get itchy. By violating the fundamental assumptions of liberal i...

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Main Author: Emmy Rākete
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Gothenburg 2023-01-01
Series:Parse Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://parsejournal.com/article/in-human-parasites-posthumanism-and-papatuanuku/
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author Emmy Rākete
author_facet Emmy Rākete
author_sort Emmy Rākete
collection DOAJ
description Capitalist society relies on the liberal notion of atomistic individuals carrying distinct personal and property rights. These ideas are reflected in common sense as well as in bourgeois law, but they fall apart the second you start to get itchy. By violating the fundamental assumptions of liberal individualism, parasites provide a useful starting point for a reconsideration of the relationship between self and other. Informed by deep ecology, new materialism, and Māori philosophical tradition, in this paper I use our shared genealogical descent from the planet herself to propose a new framework for thinking about ourselves. Outside of the capitalist concept of separate individuals in which our thinking has been confined, we find that all along we were an interconnected, permeable, penetrable whole.
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spelling doaj.art-c433b9ee54d24490989e639671ec294c2023-02-01T12:02:40ZengUniversity of GothenburgParse Journal2002-05112002-09532023-01-01Violence: Environment15In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and PapatūānukuEmmy RāketeCapitalist society relies on the liberal notion of atomistic individuals carrying distinct personal and property rights. These ideas are reflected in common sense as well as in bourgeois law, but they fall apart the second you start to get itchy. By violating the fundamental assumptions of liberal individualism, parasites provide a useful starting point for a reconsideration of the relationship between self and other. Informed by deep ecology, new materialism, and Māori philosophical tradition, in this paper I use our shared genealogical descent from the planet herself to propose a new framework for thinking about ourselves. Outside of the capitalist concept of separate individuals in which our thinking has been confined, we find that all along we were an interconnected, permeable, penetrable whole.https://parsejournal.com/article/in-human-parasites-posthumanism-and-papatuanuku/indigenous peoplespapatūānukupolitical ecology
spellingShingle Emmy Rākete
In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
Parse Journal
indigenous peoples
papatūānuku
political ecology
title In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
title_full In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
title_fullStr In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
title_full_unstemmed In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
title_short In Human: Parasites, Posthumanism and Papatūānuku
title_sort in human parasites posthumanism and papatuanuku
topic indigenous peoples
papatūānuku
political ecology
url https://parsejournal.com/article/in-human-parasites-posthumanism-and-papatuanuku/
work_keys_str_mv AT emmyrakete inhumanparasitesposthumanismandpapatuanuku