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Un-making Environmental Activism : Beyond Modern/Colonial Binaries in the GMO Controversy

Part of the Routledge Research in Place, Space and Politics series
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Much environmental activism is caught in a logic that plays science against emotion, objective evidence against partisan aims, and human interest against a nature that has intrinsic value.

Radical activists, by contrast, play down the role of science in determining environmental politics, but read their solutions to environmental problems off fixed theories of domination and oppression.

Both of these approaches are based in a modern epistemology grounded in the fundamental dichotomy between the human and the natural.

This binary has historically come about through the colonial oppression of other, non-Western and often non-binary ways of knowing nature and living in the world.

There is an urgent need for a different, decolonised environmental activist strategy that moves away from this epistemology, recognises its colonial heritage and finds a different ground for environmental beliefs and politics.

This book analyses the arguments and practices of anti-GMO activists at three different sites - the site of science, the site of the Bt cotton controversy in India, and the site of global environmental protest - to show how we can move beyond modern/colonial binaries.

It will do so in dialogue with Gilles Deleuze, Bruno Latour, Maria Lugones, and Gayatri C.

Spivak, as well as a broader range of postcolonial and decolonial bodies of thought.

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Product Details
Routledge
0367875802 / 9780367875800
Paperback / softback
363.7
12/12/2019
United Kingdom
English
140 pages
24 cm
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2017.