A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism

In Japan’s southernmost prefecture, Okinawa, the Japanese government is constructing a new military base for the United States Marine Corps despite ongoing local opposition and protest. Sea grass beds, which are potential feeding grounds of the critically endangered Okinawa dugong, are situated with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Marius Palz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2021-06-01
Series:Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2467
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spelling doaj-e41a1cff004845a3af062e885f28fe722021-06-08T06:55:30ZengLED Edizioni Universitarie Relations 2283-31962280-96432021-06-0181-277951413A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against MilitarismMarius PalzIn Japan’s southernmost prefecture, Okinawa, the Japanese government is constructing a new military base for the United States Marine Corps despite ongoing local opposition and protest. Sea grass beds, which are potential feeding grounds of the critically endangered Okinawa dugong, are situated within the construction area. Because of its critical status close to regional extinction, the dugong was declared a Natural Monument of Japan in 1972, arguably putting it under protection of the United States National Historic Preservation Act in context of the base construction. Based on this assumption, and the dugong’s cultural significance for the people of Okinawa, the issue was brought to an American court, a rare case where an animal plays a central role in a lawsuit dealing with cultural property. Based on Eduardo Kohn’s anthropology beyond the human and his thoughts on life as a semiotic process the article explores the entanglements between dugongs and people. I argue that in this process dugongs play an active role. Through their interpretation of the generated indexical signs at the construction site and their resulting behaviour, these animals give humans the opportunity to convert their presence and absence into the sphere of symbolic human interaction.https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2467basecourt casedugongeduardo kohnenvironmental justiceextinctionmultispecies ethnographyokinawasemioticssymbols.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marius Palz
spellingShingle Marius Palz
A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
Relations
base
court case
dugong
eduardo kohn
environmental justice
extinction
multispecies ethnography
okinawa
semiotics
symbols.
author_facet Marius Palz
author_sort Marius Palz
title A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
title_short A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
title_full A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
title_fullStr A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
title_full_unstemmed A Sea Cow Goes to Court. Extinction and Animal Agency in a Struggle Against Militarism
title_sort sea cow goes to court. extinction and animal agency in a struggle against militarism
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Relations
issn 2283-3196
2280-9643
publishDate 2021-06-01
description In Japan’s southernmost prefecture, Okinawa, the Japanese government is constructing a new military base for the United States Marine Corps despite ongoing local opposition and protest. Sea grass beds, which are potential feeding grounds of the critically endangered Okinawa dugong, are situated within the construction area. Because of its critical status close to regional extinction, the dugong was declared a Natural Monument of Japan in 1972, arguably putting it under protection of the United States National Historic Preservation Act in context of the base construction. Based on this assumption, and the dugong’s cultural significance for the people of Okinawa, the issue was brought to an American court, a rare case where an animal plays a central role in a lawsuit dealing with cultural property. Based on Eduardo Kohn’s anthropology beyond the human and his thoughts on life as a semiotic process the article explores the entanglements between dugongs and people. I argue that in this process dugongs play an active role. Through their interpretation of the generated indexical signs at the construction site and their resulting behaviour, these animals give humans the opportunity to convert their presence and absence into the sphere of symbolic human interaction.
topic base
court case
dugong
eduardo kohn
environmental justice
extinction
multispecies ethnography
okinawa
semiotics
symbols.
url https://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/2467
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