Earthmoving
Autor Eray Çaylien Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 oct 2025
Extractivism—exploiting the earth for resources—has long driven racial capitalism and colonialism. And yet, how does extractivism operate in a world where ecological and humanitarian sensibilities are unprecedentedly widespread? Eray Çaylı argues it does so by mobilizing these sensibilities in new ways. Extractivism is no longer only about moving the earth—displacing peoples, fossils, minerals, and waters—but also leaving those who witness this violent displacement sentimentally moved.
Earthmoving conceptualizes this duality. Derived from Çaylı’s years-long work in Northern Kurdistan, home to the world’s largest stateless nation—rendered stateless by colonial policies since the nineteenth century—Earthmoving focuses on the 2010s, a decade that began with peace talks between Turkey and the Kurdish liberation movement but ended with war. The decade saw extractivism intensify in the region and images of its harm proliferate across art and media. Together with contemporary artists, Çaylı shows that images challenge extractivism both by making its harm visible and by fostering self-reflexive and reciprocal collaboration that breaks with its valuation of the colonized and the racialized only in quantifiable and marketable terms.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781477332771
ISBN-10: 1477332774
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 47 b&w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 218 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
ISBN-10: 1477332774
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 47 b&w photos
Dimensiuni: 152 x 218 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
Notă biografică
Eray Çaylı is a professor of human geography with a focus on violence and security in the Anthropocene at the University of Hamburg and a visiting fellow at the European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science. He is the author of Victims of Commemoration: The Architecture and Violence of Confronting the Past in Turkey, coeditor of Architectures of Emergency in Turkey: Heritage, Displacement and Catastrophe, and a member of the Journal of Visual Culture's editorial collective.
Cuprins
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Glossary
- Author’s Note
- Maps
- Movement of and Through Earth, or Extractivism and Its Aesthetics
- 1. Extractivist and Antiextractivist Aesthetics
- 2. The Art of Peace and Its Extractivisms
- 3. War’s Hypervisibility and Humanitarian Extractivisms
- 4. Testifying to Survival Environmentally and Nonextractivist Aesthetics
- 5. Haunting as Ecology and Counterextractivist Aesthetics
- Movement in and with Ashen Country, or Toward Nonextractivist Scholarship
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Recenzii
Featuring rich empirical work and detailed analysis, Earthmoving is an important contribution to violence/trauma studies and to political geology. Eray Çaylı presents a rich array of material for his arguments, providing a clear direction to how to think about the intervention of the visual in the making of geophysical worlds. Among this material, Çaylı introduces the reader to underrepresented and visually engaging art projects, which themselves deserve bigger audiences. Earthmoving is undoubtedly a crucial pedagogical tool for reimagining agency in the recursive construction site of extraction and its political terrain.
Earthmoving offers a timely intervention into the entangled geologies of political violence and racialized extraction—from dams and sand quarries to the logics of counterinsurgent humanitarianism and the specters of genocidal state violence. By foregrounding counterextractivist aesthetics, Eray Çaylı exposes these violent infrastructures and gestures toward forms of life that persist within and against them, all while grappling with the unintended complicities such gestures may entail. Earthmoving is a welcome contribution to the study—and the sensing—of Middle Eastern political ecologies.
Descriere
Focuses on contemporary art and media to examine the role of visuals in environmental violence and war in Northern Kurdistan.