After Pollution: Elusive Chemistries, Changing Aquifer Porosities, and the Emergence of Subterranean Sovereignty in Yucatán, México
Campus Location
Office/Remote Location
Description
Speaker: Pablo Aguilera Del Castillo
This talk is part of the weekly Anthropology Proseminar Speaker Series.
Abstract:
This research project takes us to the southern state of Yucatán in Mexico, a site of rapidly growing agroindustrialism and large-scale national infrastructure projects, to interrogate the elusive problem of aquifer pollution. Through a close analysis of the intimate socialities and everyday practices between Yucatecans and different subterranean sites (sinkholes, wells, caves, etc.), this talk seeks to complicate traditional accounts of aquifer pollution, contributing towards the conceptualization of emergent forms of subterranean sovereignty in places like Yucatán. By examining specific encounters of Yucatec people with the aquifer and its transformation, this talk considers what it means to privilege an analysis of the unexpected, contradictory, intimate attachments of people with a shifting ground. Beyond traditional understandings of pollution, how might this new ethnographic attention to transforming the limits between the underground and the aboveground provide a different sense of territorial sovereignty, Indigenous autonomy, and emerging political horizons amid the ongoing coloniality of racial capitalism and agroindustrialism?
Price
Free
Admission Information
Open to the public