Compound Eyes
1 media/compound eye_thumb.jpeg 2022-11-05T14:37:53-07:00 Sigi Jöttkandt 4115726eb75e75e43252a5cbfc72a780d0304d7d 30986 1 plain 2022-11-05T14:37:53-07:00 Sigi Jöttkandt 4115726eb75e75e43252a5cbfc72a780d0304d7dThis page is referenced by:
-
1
2022-11-11T20:30:50-08:00
Reflections on Subcide
26
plain
2022-11-19T14:42:06-08:00
The e-concept subcide emerged from a recent news story about the ongoing destruction caused by agricultural runoff on the north coast of NSW. Subcide combines the prefix ‘sub’ which means under or beneath with ‘cide’ which denotes a substance that kills. To subcide is to look beneath our anthropocentric gaze to see the ‘hidden’ deaths we have caused as a result of our indiscriminate pesticide use.
Subcide is a concept founded on various destabilisations. Firstly, one cannot aurally differentiate the e-concept 'subcide' from 'subside'; a word which evokes vastly different images of a calming storm or a receding tide. By replacing the letter ‘s’ with ‘c’, the e-concept subcide demands us to remain alert to the subtle changes in language that turn words into something more pernicious, in the same way we must remain alert to the silent deaths around us. The second destabilisation developed out of my close reading of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring where the rhythms and content of her language stretch us across micro and macro scales to comprehend the totality of our destruction. Where Carson's words mobilise us to see the deaths beneath our gaze at various scales, what necessarily accompanies subcide is an experience of motion sickness.
Through the continual development of my e-concept, I also discovered how it reinforced certain anthropocentric presuppositions. Notably, my initial conception of subcide positioned the non-human world as the object which the human subject acted upon by spraying it with harmful substances, thus denying the non-human world any agential power. In an attempt to transcend this binary, I drew upon transcorporeal thinking to show how the non-human world also acts upon us. In Alaimo's words:
Hence, where we experience a ‘motion sickness’ in trying to comprehend the micro and macro scales of our destruction, the porous quality of our bodies means that our gaze must also turn inward; something which the earlier e-concept of ‘sea-reading’ elucidated. I then merged the idea of 'motion sickness' with sea-reading (or 'c' reading) to create ‘c’ sickness: a term that describes the dizzying effect that accompanies subcide. It asks us to simultaneously project our gaze outward and inward to account for the fact that the deaths outside our bodies are intimately connected to the decay within us.we are always already the very substance and stuff of the world that we are changing.
The development of my e-concept also urged me to reassess my understanding of theories conceived by Morton and Alaimo. The more I thought about the ongoing chains of deaths pesticides cause, the more it began to emerge as a hyperobject. That is to say, the totality of pesticide deaths seemingly resists spaciotemporal specificity. Its smaller manifestations - like the single death of the tawny frogmouth - gesture us towards the larger totality of deaths, yet can never fully embody the hyperobject. Additionally, where I relied on transcorporeal thinking to deduce that humans are not exempt from the process of subciding, this raised new ethical questions about the erasure of certain subjectivities based on race, class and gender. This lead me to think about how our indiscriminate pesticide use has discriminate impacts on divisions across humanity and other species; from the underpaid workers who spray chemical agents, to communities of colour who experience a disproportionate amount of hazardous waste disposal by governments and large corporations.
While the bulk of my research centred around death and irreversible destruction, I also found that to subcide is to also see something more profound about life. Like the moth under Woolf’s watchful eye or the “subsiding spasm” of Nabokov’s butterfly, the ongoing transferal of pesticides is only made possible by the life-sustaining chains that connect all living things. Hence, the easy transferal of toxins also alerts us to unexpected interconnections between living things. Similarly, to experience a ‘c’ sickness when fluctuating between micro and micro scales invites new possibilities for the human subject to see how the “tiny bead of pure life” thrums across all life forms.
This tiny bead led me to the through-line of my research which came to rest on the blueberry aphid’s Compound eyeS; the very insect which provoked the farmers in northern NSW to spray their crops in the first place. Where the aphid views the world in a series of tiny images that converge to represent one larger visual image, the notion of subcide requires us to hold the millions of pesticide-affected life forms in a singular view to ultimately see the chain of pesticide deaths in its totality. In this sense, to subcide is to hold ourselves accountable to the deaths we have caused, and to undertake a renewed ethical obligation to protect and preserve life.
George Raptis (z5206747)
-
1
2022-11-05T14:41:10-07:00
Compound eyeS
8
plain
2022-11-18T20:12:31-08:00
Where the e-concept subcide demands us to lower our gaze and see the hidden deaths we have caused as a result of our indiscriminate pesticide use, the insectostance provides us with a new way of achieving this gaze.
In my previous post, I suggested that humans must take in the micro and macro scales of their destruction; something which triggers a ‘c’ sickness from its destabilising effect. A macro scale is necessary to comprehend the totality of pesticide-linked deaths since it mostly appears to us as a hyperobject. Similar to global warming, the incomplete effects of pesticide use exists beyond spatiotemporal specificity. That is to say, while we can scrutinise the single death of the tawny frogmouth, it alone cannot reveal the hyperobject in its totality since there is a whole causal chain of other deaths that we are blind to.
Since hyperobjects are imperceptible to humans, we need a new lens. In insectostance, one pulls away from the collective in order to gain a viewpoint of an individual within the collective. While humans might find it difficult to comprehend the totality of subciding life forms and inevitably position oneself as the agent who acts upon the non-human world, the insectostance gives us perspective of the whole destruction whilst recognising our very positions within the hyperobject.
If we are to take on an insectostance to truly see the deaths below our gaze, perhaps the blueberry aphid’s sight provides us with the literal lens for taking in the totality of our destruction. The aphids, which are prone to pesticide spraying from blueberry farmers, possess a pair of compound eyes consisting of tiny independent photoreception units which distinguish brightness and colour. In this sense, the aphid’s view is like a mosaic made up of tiny images that converge to represent one larger visual image. Similarly, the notion of subcide requires us to hold the millions of pesticide-affected life forms in a singular image - from the farmed blueberry bush to the pulsing Hearnes lake. Thus, it is through Compound eyeS that we can truly see the chain of pesticide deaths in its totality.
George Raptis (z5206747)
Links to Further Readings- "Senses. Insect eyes." In Insects and Spiders of the World (Marshall Cavendish, New York, 2003).
- "Eye", AphID, last modified March 2014, https://aphid.aphidnet.org/eye.php#:~:text=Most%20adult%20aphids%20have%20a,margin%20of%20the%20compound%20eye.