journal article Apr 29, 2019

Anthropocene, Capitalocene, … Plantationocene?: A Manifesto for Ecological Justice in an Age of Global Crises

View at Publisher Save 10.1111/gec3.12438
Abstract
Abstract
The “Plantationocene” has gained traction in the environmental humanities as a way of conceptualizing the current era otherwise nominated as the Anthropocene, Capitalocene, or the Chthulucene. For Donna Haraway, Anna Tsing, and their interlocutors, the concept suggests that our current ecological crisis is rooted in logics of environmental modernization, homogeneity, and control, which were developed on historical plantations. This paper argues that, while there is indeed a need to analyze the ways in which the plantation past shapes the present, current discussions of the Plantationocene have several crucial limitations. Here, we focus on two: first, the current multispecies framing conceptualizes the plantation largely as a system of human control over nature, obscuring the centrality of racial politics; and second, the emerging Plantationocene discussion has yet to meaningfully engage with the wide variety of existing critiques of the plantation mode of development. Thus, we draw on a deep well of Black geographic and ecological work that provides a powerful challenge to the ongoing colonial–racial legacies of the plantation, prompting consideration of white supremacy, capitalist development, and (mis)characterizations of what it means to be human. These approaches not only reveal a more nuanced and comprehensive analysis of the role of the plantation in current global crises but also highlight ongoing struggles and the possibilities of ecological justice in the future.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
88
[1]
Ball C. (2010)
[2]
Beckford G. L. (1972)
[3]
Bedasse J. (1996)
[4]
Marronage as a Past and Present Geography in the Americas

Adam Bledsoe

Southeastern Geographer 10.1353/sgo.2017.0004
[6]
Bullard R. D. (2005)
[7]
Carey B. (1997)
[11]
Castree N. "The Anthropocene and Geography I: The back story" Faculty of Social Sciences ‐ Papers (2014)
[15]
Crutzen P. "The “Anthropocene.”" International Geosphere‐Biosphere Programme Newsletter (2000)
[19]
Davis H. "On the Importance of a Date, or Decolonizing the Anthropocene" ACME: An International E‐Journal for Critical Geographies (2017)
[20]
Diouf S. (2014)
[23]
Fanon F. (1963)
[25]
First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit (1991)
[26]
Foner E. (2016)
[28]
Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene: Making Kin

Donna Haraway

Environmental Humanities 10.1215/22011919-3615934
[30]
Haraway D. J. (2016)
[31]
Haymes S. N. (2018) 10.1515/9780295743721-005
[32]
Hecht G.(2018).The African Anthropocene. Aeon. Retrieved fromhttps://aeon.co/essays/if‐we‐talk‐about‐hurting‐our‐planet‐who‐exactly‐is‐the‐we
[33]
Hurley P. T. "Dodging alligators, rattlesnakes, and backyard docks: A political ecology of sweetgrass basket‐making and conservation in the South Carolina Lowcountry, USA" The Geographical Journal (2011)
[34]
IPCC(2018).Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C (SR15).http://www.ipcc.ch/report/sr15/
[36]
Jacobs H. A. (1987)
[39]
Kress J. W. (2017)
[41]
Defining the Anthropocene

Simon L. Lewis, Mark A. Maslin

Nature 10.1038/nature14258
[42]
Locke J. (1980)
[44]
Luke T. W. "Tracing race, ethnicity, and civilization in the Anthropocene" Environment and Planning D: Society and Space (2018)
[45]
Malm A. (2016)
[50]
McKittrick K. (2006)

Showing 50 of 88 references

Metrics
486
Citations
88
References
Details
Published
Apr 29, 2019
Vol/Issue
13(5)
License
View
Cite This Article
Janae Davis, Alex A. Moulton, Levi Van Sant, et al. (2019). Anthropocene, Capitalocene, … Plantationocene?: A Manifesto for Ecological Justice in an Age of Global Crises. Geography Compass, 13(5). https://doi.org/10.1111/gec3.12438