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Title: | Ecological Haunting and Overdetermination in an ‘End Time’: An (Auto)Ethnography |
Authors: | Garcia, Joaquin |
Advisors: | Ralph, Laurence |
Department: | Anthropology |
Certificate Program: | Environmental Studies Program |
Class Year: | 2020 |
Abstract: | The rather sobering realization of the extent of the unfolding socio-ecological death world (to use a Mbembeian expression), both human and more-than-human, forms an affective background, if not a basis, for the meditation at hand. I take the expanding necoroscape very seriously, and it suffuses and centers this thesis. Drawing on an auto-ethnography of my home environment as well as the situatedness of an environmental justice organization at which I interned in said environment, making use of, for example, historically and philosophically attuned close readings and memories of landscapes along with recollections of conversations with fellow interns and community members, I elaborate something like an overdetermined ecological haunting and demonstrate an overdetermined figuration of what constitutes the ecological in the first place. |
URI: | http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp015q47rr76p |
Type of Material: | Princeton University Senior Theses |
Language: | en |
Appears in Collections: | Anthropology, 1961-2020 |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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GARCIA-JOAQUIN-THESIS.pdf | 11.51 MB | Adobe PDF | Request a copy |
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