Ocean Weaves: Reconfigurations of Climate Justice in Oceania
This article engages weaving as a model of feminist decolonial climate justice methodology in Oceania. In particular, it looks to three weaver-activists who use their practices to reclaim the matrixial power of the ocean (as maternal womb and network of relation) in the face of ongoing US occupation...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Feminist review 2022-03, Vol.130 (1), p.5-25 |
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description | This article engages weaving as a model of feminist decolonial climate justice methodology in Oceania. In particular, it looks to three weaver-activists who use their practices to reclaim the matrixial power of the ocean (as maternal womb and network of relation) in the face of ongoing US occupation in the Pacific: Marshallese poet and climate activist Kathy Jetn̄il-Kijiner; Hawai‘i-based settler-ally weaver and installation artist Mary Babcock; and Kānaka Maoli sculptor Kaili Chun, also based in Hawai‘i. Each artist begins from a particular positionality in the ongoing open weave of the ocean and uses specific cultural ontologies of weaving and netting to address knots and gaps in climate change imaginaries. These weavers help to articulate important nuances in recent calls for working in solidarity networks at the cultural interface of climate justice activism. Their processes directly address the need for greater emotional and relational capacity across cultural and national divides, across Indigenous and non-Indigenous feminist critiques of colonial-capitalist systems and through inter-connected waters. |
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subjects | Activism Activists Artisans Capitalism Climate change Climate justice Collaboration Colonialism Commercial fishing Culture Decolonization Environmental justice Environmental policy Etymology Feminism Feminist criticism Installation Military occupations Ocean currents Oceanic languages Ontology Pacific Islander people Power System theory Uterus Visual artists Watersheds Weaving |
title | Ocean Weaves: Reconfigurations of Climate Justice in Oceania |
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