Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations

Abstract Abstract: This paper examines the possibilities and limitations of an emergent global discourse of indigeneity to offer an oppositional praxis in the face of the depredations of settler colonialism in post-apartheid South Africa. Self-conscious articulations of indigeneity, we argue, reveal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Narendran Kumarakulasingam, Mvuselelo Ngcoya
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Series:Contexto Internacional
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292016000300843&lng=en&tlng=en
id doaj-1fd4460022ca4630a85b39be2e52750a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1fd4460022ca4630a85b39be2e52750a2020-11-25T00:06:30ZspaPontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de JaneiroContexto Internacional1982-024038384386410.1590/s0102-8529.2016380300006S0102-85292016000300843Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial ImaginationsNarendran KumarakulasingamMvuselelo NgcoyaAbstract Abstract: This paper examines the possibilities and limitations of an emergent global discourse of indigeneity to offer an oppositional praxis in the face of the depredations of settler colonialism in post-apartheid South Africa. Self-conscious articulations of indigeneity, we argue, reveal the fraught relationship between increasingly hegemonic and narrow understandings of the indigenous and the carceral logic of apartheid. We examine this by focusing on the meanings and attachments forged through indigenous plants in two realms: the world of indigenous gardening practised by white suburban dwellers and that of subsistence farming undertaken by rural black women. This juxtaposition reveals that in contrast to the pervasive resurrection of colonial time that defines metropolitan indigenous gardening, the social relations of a subsistence cultivator challenge the confines of colonial temporality, revealing a creative mode of dissent structured around dreams, ancestral knowledge, and the commons. Our exploration of struggles around botanical indigeneity suggests that anticolonial modes of indigeneity do not necessarily inhere in recognisable forms and that studies of the indigenous need to proceed beyond those that bear familial resemblance to emergent global understandings.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292016000300843&lng=en&tlng=enIndigeneityColonialSouth AfricaGardeningSubsistenceRaceTemporality
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Narendran Kumarakulasingam
Mvuselelo Ngcoya
spellingShingle Narendran Kumarakulasingam
Mvuselelo Ngcoya
Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
Contexto Internacional
Indigeneity
Colonial
South Africa
Gardening
Subsistence
Race
Temporality
author_facet Narendran Kumarakulasingam
Mvuselelo Ngcoya
author_sort Narendran Kumarakulasingam
title Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
title_short Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
title_full Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
title_fullStr Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
title_full_unstemmed Plant Provocations: Botanical Indigeneity and (De)colonial Imaginations
title_sort plant provocations: botanical indigeneity and (de)colonial imaginations
publisher Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
series Contexto Internacional
issn 1982-0240
description Abstract Abstract: This paper examines the possibilities and limitations of an emergent global discourse of indigeneity to offer an oppositional praxis in the face of the depredations of settler colonialism in post-apartheid South Africa. Self-conscious articulations of indigeneity, we argue, reveal the fraught relationship between increasingly hegemonic and narrow understandings of the indigenous and the carceral logic of apartheid. We examine this by focusing on the meanings and attachments forged through indigenous plants in two realms: the world of indigenous gardening practised by white suburban dwellers and that of subsistence farming undertaken by rural black women. This juxtaposition reveals that in contrast to the pervasive resurrection of colonial time that defines metropolitan indigenous gardening, the social relations of a subsistence cultivator challenge the confines of colonial temporality, revealing a creative mode of dissent structured around dreams, ancestral knowledge, and the commons. Our exploration of struggles around botanical indigeneity suggests that anticolonial modes of indigeneity do not necessarily inhere in recognisable forms and that studies of the indigenous need to proceed beyond those that bear familial resemblance to emergent global understandings.
topic Indigeneity
Colonial
South Africa
Gardening
Subsistence
Race
Temporality
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-85292016000300843&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT narendrankumarakulasingam plantprovocationsbotanicalindigeneityanddecolonialimaginations
AT mvuselelongcoya plantprovocationsbotanicalindigeneityanddecolonialimaginations
_version_ 1725421789790601216