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The Aesthetics of Extractivism: Violence, Ecology, and Sensibility in Turkey’s Kurdistan
Author(s) -
Çaylı Eray
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
antipode
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.177
H-Index - 98
eISSN - 1467-8330
pISSN - 0066-4812
DOI - 10.1111/anti.12723
Subject(s) - scholarship , sensibility , anthropocene , agency (philosophy) , negation , conversation , aesthetics , argument (complex analysis) , sociology , environmental ethics , value (mathematics) , epistemology , philosophy , social science , law , political science , communication , biology , linguistics , biochemistry , machine learning , computer science
Focusing on dams and sand quarries, I discuss extractivism’s racialised workings along the uppermost stretch of the Tigris river in Turkey’s Kurdistan. In conversation with decolonial scholarship on “the Anthropocene”, I theorise through aesthetics the symbolic, epistemic, and corporeal violence of reducing the value of human and nonhuman life and agency to that of an extractable resource. My contribution to this scholarship involves a twofold argument. First, extractivism is upheld not only by the negation (or rendering insensible) of humans and nonhumans, but also the affirmation (or rendering excessively sensible) thereof, insofar as the latter shares the former’s racialised logic of valuing life and agency quantifiably. Second, the affirmations are not always straightforwardly territorialisable as they are often geographically entangled with the negations, particularly in times of crises that throw extractivist excesses into sharp relief. I conclude by thinking with activism to flesh out the counter‐extractivist implications of my argument.