n her 2016 Edward W. Said lecture, Naomi Klein examines how Said’s ideas of racial hierarchy, including Orientalism, have been the silent partners to climate change since the earliest days of the steam engine, continuing to present day decisions to let entire nations drown and others warm to lethal levels. The lecture looks at how Said’s bold universalist vision might form the basis for a response to climate change grounded in radical inclusion, belonging and restorative justice.

  • @feedum_sneedson
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    -113 months ago

    Can’t get behind the annoying sociology degree language. Even if the point is valid.

      • @feedum_sneedson
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        -53 months ago

        I don’t like the use of “othering” as a verb, basically. A girthy third of my MSc included swimming in the twat-infested waters of academic sociology so I feel I’ve earned my battle-scars in that respect. I once had a professor tell me “dams don’t work, anyway” as a way of terminating a debate on the relocation of tribal communities in central India. The entire history of agriculture would seem to disagree with that assessment.

        • @yildolw
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          43 months ago

          How do you feel about “demonizing” or “dehumanizing”? Same concept, older lingo

          • @feedum_sneedson
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            3 months ago

            I think it’s a bad thing, and those are the words I would use. Or something along those lines.