Imperial Terroir: Toward a Queer Molecular Ecology of Colonial Masculinities

Male violence is fundamental to the formation and ongoing existence of settler colonial states. In accounting for histories of settler colonialism, evolutionary approaches have often been used to locate the origins of this violence in biology and rationalize the social orders of the colony as inevitable outcomes of nature. Given this history, queer and Indigenous critiques of settler governance are essential in order to track the ways that racist hetero patriarchal regimes of power emerge through colonial masculinities, not as inevitable consequences of biology, but as historically-contingent processes. In questioning the origins of colonial violence, however, it is important that such critiques not entirely abandon questions of nature, but reframe them by offering creative accounts of bodies and reckoning with the ways colonial masculinity makes itself felt across human and more-than-human ecologies. Here, Dr. Smith argues that colonial masculinities are recent historical inventions that took shape over the last five centuries as creations of colonialism. Given these historical contingencies, Dr. Smith works to shift questions of nature from maleness itself to the nature cultures that colonial masculinities bring into being, tracing some of the emerging molecular ecologies of the colony.

Speaker(s): Dr. Rick Smith, Dartmouth College
When
Friday, Jan 31, 2020 at 12:00pm until 1:00pm on Friday, Jan 31, 2020
Where
Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences and Engineering (CILSE 106C)
Who
Open to General Public
Admission is free
Contact
CAS - Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies Program
Gabby Newton
617-358-2370
 
Boston University

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