digsdigsdigs: A beautiful American badger running through a field with wildflowers. (Default)
"Probably new to science": Locating Indigenous Knowledge in Colonial Archives, by Keri G. Lambert at Environmental History Now. I love this blog -- they do a wonderful range of posts from scholars working in environmental history. This essay about archival work on 1880s Gold Coast rubber plantations and how knowledge becomes "scientific" is definitely going into my file for the "worldbuilding politics of rubber in Discworld" piece I'm not writing, HBBO ... :)

"... If you skimmed that, I urge you to read it again. It’s just a short letter talking about plants you’ve probably never seen and a language you may never have heard of. But seriously, take a look at what is going on here: a reasonably powerful colonial official is drawing on indigenous botanical knowledge (as reflected in Twi nomenclature) to report to the metropole’s epicenter of imperial science what he believes to be a novel scientific discovery.

In one fell swoop, Tudhope recognizes a sophisticated knowledge regime that classifies plants by genus and sex… yet he defines that knowledge as not quite “science,” which he insinuates is that which is advanced by non-Africans. In much the same way, Evans, in his letter (above), had described coagulation-via-“Diecha” as a “new process”—but to whom was it new? It’s highly likely that he learned it from experienced Gold Coast rubber workers.

In four letters, exchanged over ten months, we see the extraction, exchange, and embrace of indigenous knowledge, as well as the delimitation of a narrow “scientific” knowledge."

Hermeneutical Injustice in Consent and Asexuality, by starchythoughts. Developed by philosopher Miranda Fricker in Epistemic Injustice: Power and the Ethics of Knowing, hermeneutic injustice is “the injustice of having some significant area of one’s social experience obscured from collective understanding owing to a structural identity prejudice in the collective hermeneutical resource.” This post is specifically about ace issues but this concept seems rich and powerful to me -- it makes it possible for me to recognize the extent to which, as a writer, I'm invested in the internal and external formations and effects of this kind of injustice. Fricker, via starchy: “The primary harm of hermeneutical injustice, then, is to be understood not only in terms of the subject’s being unfairly disadvantaged by some collective hermeneutical lacuna, but also in terms of the very construction (constitutive and/or causal) of selfhood. In certain social contexts, hermeneutical injustice can mean that someone is socially constituted as, and perhaps even caused to be, something they are not, and which it is against their interests to be seen to be.”

The Disability Gulag, Harriet McBryde Johnson. I wish Johnson were still alive; I wish I had found her work soon enough to put it on my syllabus. This piece is specifically about the harms and threats of institutionalization. Despite the pain of the subject matter, I find her to be an absolute pleasure to read.
digsdigsdigs: A beautiful American badger running through a field with wildflowers. (Default)

Sex talks: The language of sexual negotiation must go far beyond ‘consent’ and ‘refusal’ if we are to foster ethical, autonomous sex, by Rebecca Kukkla for Aeon.

I found this piece really interesting, skeptical as I was, given that Kukkla seems uninformed or uninterested here in the relationship between the feminist language of consent and its analysis of gender violence. But she draws distinctions between requests, invitations, and gift offers as types of speech in a way that seems like it might actually have some uses in prevention education and policy-making.

The "Tragedy of the Commons" was invented by a white supremacist based on a false history, by Cory Doctorow at BoingBoing.

I had no idea!

Ingenious: Vijay Iyer, by Kevin Berger at Nautilus

This interview is from back in 2014 but I just returned to it and I really like it. Iyer, a jazz pianist, has a really nuanced way of talking about the relationship of "genius" to political and historical context.

Words, binary and biphobia: or, why "bi" is binary but "FTM" is not, by Shiri Eisner at radicalbi

A long and thoughtful consideration of the "'bi' means 'two' so it's binary and transphobic" argument. Eisner is writing as a bi, genderqueer activist. I self-identify as bisexual or queer, but not pan, and I was thinking about that and this gave me some food for thought on, you know, the Discourse.

Sundown Towns in the United States: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism -- the website for the book by James Loewen

Found my way here through a twitter conversation about "best places to live," hometowns, and sundown towns; I particularly recommend the searchable database. The town where I grew up isn't listed, but the longer-established posher town one over sure is.

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