Recognising injustice in the Anthropocene
In their quoting of Martin Luther King Jr, the plant world opens up a dialogue surrounding justice and injustice for the natural world, in which humans must participate. I especially found their development of the concept of 'plant blindness' in ‘Plant Blindness A short Film’ insightful because it exposed the constructed hierarchical relations that dominate human understanding. Immediately, I recall the ethical transgressions explored in the Animal Worlds: Photo Essay, as well as the violent imagery of demolition and construction in the close reading of Robert Frost's, ‘A brook in the city’.
- Martin Luther King JrInjustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.
What is exposed by these fragments of exploitation and violence against non-human bodies, whether they be geological, biological, atmospheric or botanical, is a more deeply ingrained, problematic attitude of anthropocentrism or human exceptionalism, which touches every micro-landscape. It is this attitude which creates power relations where humanity strives for mastery of all. Ecocritic Val Plumwood shares that this egotistical Western notion of a Cartesian self is central to creating divides between human and non-human. This binary separation becomes the justification for the possession and mistreatment of others. The perpetuation of an artificial dichotomy of human/nature thus permits injustices against the non-human world to continue.
References:
Plumwood, Val 2001, Environmental Culture: The Ecological Crisis of Reason, Abingdon: Routledge.