11 research outputs found
Stories in a New Skin: Approaches to Inuit Literature by Keavy Martin
Review of Stories in a New Skin: Approaches to Inuit Literature by Keavy Martin
Moose: Recollections from a Northern Childhood
A creative reflection on growing up with moose
Junk Raft: an Ocean Voyage and a Rising Tide of Activism to Fight Plastic Pollution by Marcus Eriksen
Review of Marcus Eriksen\u27s Junk Raft: an Ocean Voyage and a Rising Tide of Activism to Fight Plastic Pollutio
Saviors, “sealfies,” and seals: strategies for self-representation in contemporary Inuit films
The legibility of the inter-relationships between human and seal is what is at stake when Inuit
present themselves within administrative discourses at international assemblies in defense of their
ontology and the right to hunt seals. In the language of administration and in the narrative practices of
international animal rights, seals can only appear in a predetermined categorical framework for what
constitutes human ethical responsibility to nature. The seal in animal rights discourse is one type of object
that needs saving in the form of protective measures to keep her safe from the rapacious greed of
capitalism. However, in Indigenous cultural practices, the seal is another relative, a relation whose
presence makes all certainties about hierarchies, use-value, moral exemptions, and human exceptionalism
impossible. Using the trending social media phenomenon of the “sealfie” and three contemporary
northern Indigenous films, this essay argues that the Inuit use of these media formats showcases their
cultural and economic dependence on seal hunting and restructures debates around authority, self-representation , and one-sided environmental protection activities.El entendimiento de las interrelaciones entre ser humano y foca está en juego cuando los Inuit
usan el lenguaje institucional en foros internacionales para defender su realidad y el derecho a cazar focas.
En el lenguaje administrativo y en las prácticas discursivas de los derechos internacionales de los
animales, las focas únicamente pueden aparecer como un marco categórico predeterminado de lo que
constituye la responsabilidad ética del ser humano con la naturaleza. La foca en el lenguaje de los
derechos de los animales es un objeto que necesita salvarse mediante medidas protectoras que las
salvaguarden de la avaricia agresiva del capitalismo. Sin embargo, en las prácticas culturales indígenas la
foca es percibida como un familiar, un pariente cuya presencia hace imposible nuestra certitud sobre
jerarquías, el valor de uso, la impunidad moral, y la excepcionalidad humana. Usando la moda de las redes
sociales en auge, el “sealfie” y tres películas contemporáneas indígenas del Norte, este ensayo argumenta
que los usos inuit de estos formatos mediáticos ponen de manifiesto su dependencia cultural y económica
en la caza de focas, y reestructura debates en cuanto a la autoridad, la autorepresentación, y las
actividades de protección medioambiental monodireccionales
Saviors, “sealfies,” and seals: strategies for self-representation in contemporary Inuit films
The legibility of the inter-relationships between human and seal is what is at stake when Inuit
present themselves within administrative discourses at international assemblies in defense of their
ontology and the right to hunt seals. In the language of administration and in the narrative practices of
international animal rights, seals can only appear in a predetermined categorical framework for what
constitutes human ethical responsibility to nature. The seal in animal rights discourse is one type of object
that needs saving in the form of protective measures to keep her safe from the rapacious greed of
capitalism. However, in Indigenous cultural practices, the seal is another relative, a relation whose
presence makes all certainties about hierarchies, use-value, moral exemptions, and human exceptionalism
impossible. Using the trending social media phenomenon of the “sealfie” and three contemporary
northern Indigenous films, this essay argues that the Inuit use of these media formats showcases their
cultural and economic dependence on seal hunting and restructures debates around authority, self-representation , and one-sided environmental protection activities.El entendimiento de las interrelaciones entre ser humano y foca está en juego cuando los Inuit
usan el lenguaje institucional en foros internacionales para defender su realidad y el derecho a cazar focas.
En el lenguaje administrativo y en las prácticas discursivas de los derechos internacionales de los
animales, las focas únicamente pueden aparecer como un marco categórico predeterminado de lo que
constituye la responsabilidad ética del ser humano con la naturaleza. La foca en el lenguaje de los
derechos de los animales es un objeto que necesita salvarse mediante medidas protectoras que las
salvaguarden de la avaricia agresiva del capitalismo. Sin embargo, en las prácticas culturales indígenas la
foca es percibida como un familiar, un pariente cuya presencia hace imposible nuestra certitud sobre
jerarquías, el valor de uso, la impunidad moral, y la excepcionalidad humana. Usando la moda de las redes
sociales en auge, el “sealfie” y tres películas contemporáneas indígenas del Norte, este ensayo argumenta
que los usos inuit de estos formatos mediáticos ponen de manifiesto su dependencia cultural y económica
en la caza de focas, y reestructura debates en cuanto a la autoridad, la autorepresentación, y las
actividades de protección medioambiental monodireccionales
“Let Me Breathe of It”: A Circumpolar Literary and Ecological Perspective
The commercial hunting of harp seal pups galvanized animal rights in the 1970s, culminating in the banning of sealskin products in Europe and the curtailment of trade in the United States. The seal in animal rights discourse is a type of object that needs saving in the form of protective measures to keep her safe from the rapacious greed of capitalism. However, in Indigenous discourse, the seal is another relative, a relation whose presence makes all certainties about hierarchy, use-value, moral exemption, and human exceptionalism impossible. This essay re-thinks the figural dimensions of seals in Yupiit and Inuit storytelling practices alongside debates around over-harvesting, competing global interests, and animal rights to develop current activism for environmental justice for both humans and seals in a time of rapid change. I suggest that focusing on practices of care rather than commodity circulation reframes the relationship of humans and seals beyond binary systems of interpretation that make humans subjects (with “culture”) and seals objects (in “nature”). Inuit stories, legal statutes, and environmental conservation rhetoric all appear to be different, if not contradictory, types of narratives. Nevertheless, when read together, they reveal a shared ethics of care for the wellbeing of the seal. This care, I suggest, momentarily frees seals from their entrapment in an economy of use and provides a basis for understanding the North as a lived environment
Saviors, "Sealfies," and Seals: Strategies for Self-Representation in Contemporary Inuit Films // Salvadores, "sealfies" y focas: Estrategias de autorepresentación en películas inuit contemporáneas
The legibility of the inter-relationships between human and seal is what is at stake when Inuit present themselves within administrative discourses at international assemblies in defense of their ontology and the right to hunt seals. In the language of administration and in the narrative practices of international animal rights, seals can only appear in a predetermined categorical framework for what constitutes human ethical responsibility to nature. The seal in animal rights discourse is one type of object that needs saving in the form of protective measures to keep her safe from the rapacious greed of capitalism. However, in Indigenous cultural practices, the seal is another relative, a relation whose presence makes all certainties about hierarchies, use-value, moral exemptions, and human exceptionalism impossible. Using the trending social media phenomenon of the “sealfie” and three contemporary northern Indigenous films, this essay argues that the Inuit use of these media formats showcases their cultural and economic dependence on seal hunting and restructures debates around authority, self-representation, and one-sided environmental protection activities. Resumen El entendimiento de las interrelaciones entre ser humano y foca está en juego cuando los Inuit usan el lenguaje institucional en foros internacionales para defender su realidad y el derecho a cazar focas. En el lenguaje administrativo y en las prácticas discursivas de los derechos internacionales de los animales, las focas únicamente pueden aparecer como un marco categórico predeterminado de lo que constituye la responsabilidad ética del ser humano con la naturaleza. La foca en el lenguaje de los derechos de los animales es un objeto que necesita salvarse mediante medidas protectoras que las salvaguarden de la avaricia agresiva del capitalismo. Sin embargo, en las prácticas culturales indígenas la foca es percibida como un familiar, un pariente cuya presencia hace imposible nuestra certitud sobre jerarquías, el valor de uso, la impunidad moral, y la excepcionalidad humana. Usando la moda de las redes sociales en auge, el “sealfie” y tres películas contemporáneas indígenas del Norte, este ensayo argumenta que los usos inuit de estos formatos mediáticos ponen de manifiesto su dependencia cultural y económica en la caza de focas, y reestructura debates en cuanto a la autoridad, la autorepresentación, y las actividades de protección medioambiental monodireccionales
Junk Raft: an Ocean Voyage and a Rising Tide of Activism to Fight Plastic Pollution by Marcus Eriksen
Review of Marcus Eriksen\u27s Junk Raft: an Ocean Voyage and a Rising Tide of Activism to Fight Plastic Pollutio