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Ecocriticism, Biopolitics, and Ecological Immunity
Author(s) -
Hannes Bergthaller
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ecozon@
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2171-9594
DOI - 10.37536/ecozona.2020.11.2.3542
Subject(s) - biopower , modernity , anthropocentrism , ecology , ecocriticism , naturalization , environmental ethics , sociology , sociobiology , epistemology , biology , anthropology , philosophy , political science , law , population , politics , alien , demography , census
Ecocritics tend to think of environmentalism as a form of resistance against the anthropocentrism of Western modernity. Such a view stands in contrast to biopolitical theory, which sees modernity in terms of a naturalization of the human and a generalized effort to increase the productivity of life that cuts across species lines. Building on the work of Roberto Esposito, this process can be described as a radicalized form of ecological immunization whereby humans and their domesticates are protected from the risks that attend membership in ecological communities, resulting in an “unnatural growth of the natural” (H. Arendt). The self-destructive strategies of immunization which characterize biopolitical modernity are based on a conception of life in terms of competition over scarce resources, inevitably leading to Malthusian crises. Lynn Margulis’ understanding of evolution as symbiogenesis offers an alternative on which an affirmative biopolitics balancing the demands of immunity and community can build.

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