Toxic Ecologies of the Global South (Part 1) (Panel)


Global Anglophone / Cultural Studies and Media Studies

Chijioke Onah (Cornell University)

This panel hopes to critically engage with what Sourit Bhattacharya theorized as “the toxic ecologies of the Global South” that reflects “the disposable nature of life and living in this part of the world” as well as the “socio-economic and physio-ecological conditions characteristics of the Global South” (222, 225). Given the saturation of Global South ecologies with wastes, toxins, and pollutants; I invite contributors to examine the implications of unprecedented exposure to toxic contamination and pollution from various sources, such as industrial pollution, chemical and electronic waste, fossil fuel extractions, and climate change in the Global South.

The central questions for potential contributors are: How have Anglophone and postcolonial literary writers, artists, and thinkers theorized the implications of toxicity and environmental violence in the Global South? What are the social, health, and environmental consequences of environmental pollution and toxicity to human and non-human beings in the ecosystem? In what ways can we make legible the invisible violence of toxicity and environmental violence? How can literary and creative forms help us to imagine forms of living ethically and sustainably in a toxic saturated world?

I also invite contributors to investigate the intersection between toxicity and environmental degradation in the Global South to show the uneven experiences of climate change and environmental degradation. By examining how various writers, artists, and activists engage with toxicity's (bio)politics and its relations to ecology, I invite panelists to interrogate the complex relationship between colonialism, environmental (in)justice, capitalism, race, and gender.

Please upload an abstract of 300 words and a short bio by September 30, 2023 onto the NeMLA portal. Outstanding proposals will be invited to contribute to a planned special issue of The Global South on “Toxic Ecologies and Energy Conflict in the Global South.”

Contact Email: cko34@cornell.edu

By examining the ways in which various writers, artists, and activists engage with the (bio)politics of toxicity and its relations to ecology in the Global South, we invite panelists to interrogate the complex relationship between colonialism, environmental (in)justice, capitalism, race, and gender.