Showing posts with label identity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label identity. Show all posts

11.7.24

An Environmental History of the Timber Industry: The Social Constructions of Forest and Identity

Some remarks on the Social Constructions of Forest and Identity: An Environmental History of Timber Industry Authorities in the Forests of Southeast Victoria, Australia,  Claire Waddell-Wood, La Trobe University, Victoria, 2024 (source)

 

One wonders why the degradation of Australia seems unstoppable.
Why are the forests and biodiversity being wiped out, eradicating a future for complex living beings?
What is the nexus between settler society and the extractive relationship to their surrounding country?


Claire Waddell-Wood, is an environmental historian who investigates the Victorian timber industry. Light is thrown on the extractive relationships of settler-colonial interactions with the landscapes they colonise. The conceptual framing foregrounds resource extraction/forestry labour and masculinity constructions against the background of a more-than-human world. 


The metabolism between European modes of production/ consumption took the form of “rape and pillage disasters.”  The resulting ecological crisis does not only take place in the timber industry alone, but is a way of life and work in all the extractive industries.


Victoria officially ceased logging operations recently. But in other states such as NSW (The proposed Great Koala Park) forests and their remaining biodiversity are still being denuded and erased. Elsewhere in the Big Quarry, “dualistic ontologies still guide human behaviour.” 

An acknowledgment and a change of ways of the mainstream structures, institutions and mindsets, as well as in environmental movements could harbour the possibilities for a fundamental transition of socio-ecological relations.


The ‘history of degradation’ traces the (southeast Victorian) forest industry’s  extractive work, masculinities and landscape degradation. p. 202


A “deep time forest culture (which) shaped and was shaped by long histories of interactions” (by Wurundjeri, Boonwurrung, Taungurung, Gunnai Kurnai, Jaitmatang, Bidwell, and Ngarigo people) encountered male dominated European settler culture that conceptualises “those forests through the resource imaginary”.

“The social metabolisms of invasion clashed with deep time forest cultures, and ecosystems became disturbed and damaged. The interactions between settlers and forests led to the escalation of fire frequency in forests.” p. 200


European agricultural ideals of plantation monocultures and short term crop yields constitutes a violent othering of Nature. Ancient Indigenous knowledges about forest ecology and ‘the region’s deep time fire culture’ were ignored. The result were intensified extraction and megafires.


From now on “the only true forest knowledge-holders were those trained in the forestry sciences.”  A move from bare rural masculinity in primary industries with boots on the ground to a ‘technoscience of colonial forestry’ operated at arms length via assemblages of machinery and from a top floor of a distant city.

The administration of the ‘stuff’ becomes ‘spatially alienated from the forests’. Hierarchies of (male) staff control the ‘output’ of the biophysical forest factory. Forestry and science experts with exclusionary language and procedures take control from head office over the landscape. Here “the construction masculinity through work” and the production of “wasted landscape" and “waste peoples” takes place.  p.197 


Waddell-Wood's thesis “can aid in untangling the myths of capitalism and colonialism from our everyday lives and help us to live with the biophysical world rather than against it.” p 203

Yet another stepping stone on the path to truth telling.

2.5.15

Dogs or Australian Wildlife

The majority of Australians 'vote with their feet' against biodiversity and for a monoculture of pets. Modern humans (Homo sapiens) formed an alliance with dogs early on to eradicate the local population.

Through a long process of domestication (dysgenics) they erased the wolf out of the ancient canine and ended up with an obedient dog that satisfied the desires of the master.

From the beginning, colonial society took a "dog-privileged view of the Australian landscape...The story begins with the arrival of the First Fleet. ‘From the earliest watercolours of the former prisoners, captains and surveyors, we get dogs as part of colonial life' " (source). After the introduction of 'English breeds', national identity could be established. (Leaving aside the Aboriginal Australians' culture and the dingo here).

"By the 1950s Australia ‘rode on the sheep’s back’; those who grew the wool had come to symbolise and epitomise what it was to be Australian." (source) The dog became an important factor of production to whom one could outsource mustering introduced hoofed animals.


By now one could say, the country is 'riding on the dog's back'. Having largely deserted agriculture and manufacturing, avoiding value-added activities and resorting to digging big holes, or clear cutting forests, the service industry is the sector where identity is established.

At the end of the mining boom wealth has been established for some.  For the great majority, "pets continue to power the economy". This country has one of the highest rates of pet ownership in the world, spending $1.4 billion p.a. Goods and services previously afforded for human beings only are now spent on dogs.

The dog, unlike non-human members of the great ape family, (Hominidae) has been truly included in the 'human family'. Being 'one of us', pets live the consumer's way of life and fuel the economy. The daily meat, mostly repurposed wildlife, accessories, bedding, clothing, prams, toys, medical services, insurances, vets, pet shops, dog trainers, therapists, medication, minders, groomers, hairdressers, canine boutiques, dog manicure, cafe access, tailored holiday accommodation and dogs' frequent flyers etc etc. And of course the right cars or taxi to drive the pack to the public 'loo'. Councils hold special events for dog lovers. Government collects tax. A serious economic factor with very strong interests and a lobby.

For the master the captive creature is in a hierarchical relation of permanent access. Unlike wildlife, the subordinate beast promises instant gratification for the mistresses' commands. The animal serves as a projection surface for human needs - as a friend, toy, partner, security guard, lover or punching bag. The pet owner can for once bathe in fantasies of omnipotence and power. Images of wet kisses are all-pervasive, sharing one's bed with the pack is also common. After centuries of removing the human out of the stable, people turn their dwellings back into stables for leisure pets.

The days of owning one dog are long gone, now they are hoarded in human housing, one can see dog walkers with four in harness, or outsourced to dog walkers with eight. Couples seem to express their individuality by each having two distinctive dogs. Whether people get their identity from the their decorative ornaments or priced commodity, all appear low maintenance compared to human offspring or friends.



In the 36,000 years of co-evolution of dogs and humans, the wolf has learned to manipulate the human via eye-gazing behaviour, 'puppy eyes' release a "love hormone" or "cuddle hormone" in the human being. The zombified pet owners structure their life to suit their pack. The dogs take charge.

Most pet owners in NSW seem to belong to a stay-at-home cast that service these animals 24/7. Only the best of the native landscapes will do for their 'darlings': beaches, national parks and nature reserves. They take 'a dog’s eye view of the landscape'. As the dog is mistaken for 'nature', one wouldn't want to restrain it, but let it become one with it. Unleashed, they hunt wildlife (koalas, cassowaries, little penguins, shorebirds etc) and quite frequently maul toddlers and joggers/ walkers. Should a pedestrian approach the owner, pointing out that 'dogs are not allowed here', they mutate into vicious pit bulls. Forests of signs are ignored, authorities are turning 'a blind eye' and fines are paltry.

In sub-urbia they prefer to unload  their sewage near the beach, unpack the van and let them go. The backyard does become rather smelly after some time. Full plastic bags are found on the beach, hang in vegetation or are in the drains. The majority does not pick up the sloppy poo, it stays as dung on the endless lawns on which people have their zoonotic picnics. The giant amounts of recycled meat also fuel the toxic algal blooms in the surf nicely.

Should the owners have other commitments (work) or have to attend parties, the dogs are left at home barking for hours and hours. (video) Sometimes a family toy disappoints, as puppy changes its form, it becomes a throw-away toy and a new cute baby dog is consumed. The market is also very determined by fashion influences. Should one have an outdated brand, it is time to update and dump the old one in a pound. In the holiday season many just open the door on the highway and 'the problem' is solved.


The dumped, neglected and roaming dogs in rural and peri-urban regions are then termed 'ferals'. The unwanted ballast is socialised. The 'set-free' dogs are a threat for people, wildlife and the livestock industry. From time to time mass poisoning (1080) actions take place that kill mainly the Australian endemic dingoes. No word is lost on the roaming and dumped pets gone feral.

"Australia has the worst mammal extinction rate in the world" (source) As a mega diverse, developed country people choose to entertain huge menageries of introduced animals detrimental to the endemic biodiversity. The current Australian business- as-usual trajectory will make the harsh continent even more hostile for all living beings. The intentional ignorance on climate disruption even further accelerates the extinction risk for Australian animals.

But they want pampered pooches.....



More on the family package: And then?



Updates:
The roaming dogs of Bellingen mauling livestock and pets The Bellingen courier, 19.05.2015
Have we turned dogs into lazy thinkers through domestication?
When dogs look back: inhibition of independent problem-solving behaviour in domestic dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) compared with wolves (Canis lupus)
Exporting dogs to Asia, abc 12.12.2015 
PNAS: "Bottlenecks and selective sweeps during domestication have increased deleterious genetic variation in dogs" 
 

IMAGES:
Titian, Detail of Venus and the Organ Player c. 1550 
(with Coffs Harbour sound sample, but it could be in Bellingen too)
Riding on the Sheep's Back, Blue sheep and golden dog sculpture
Public mural
Public service to collect dog feces
Trübner, Heinrich Wilhelm, Great Dane with Sausage, 1878

See also
Cura, A story about care for biodiversity
Hungry Head Beach Going to the Dogs