posted on 2024-09-05, 21:01authored byFelipe Milanez, Mary Menton, Jurema Machado de Andrade Souza
In this article, we reflect on the work of contemporary Brazilian indigenous artists and philosophers who have developed an Amerindian critique of the Anthropocene and the climate emergency. Based on research co-produced by the Another Sky research project, poetry, performance, and orality are discussed as routes of an emergent epistemological turn in the face of the inevitable challenges that lie ahead. Through indigenous thought expressed in aesthetic manifestations, we discuss critical analysis of the current situation, as well as imaginaries of future social and ecological conditions needed for climate justice, epistemiological justice, and protection of life in the broadest sense.
Funding
IDS Strategic Research Initiative on Climate and Environmental Justice
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Milanez, F.; Menton, M. and Souza, J.M.A. (2022) 'Epistemological Justice: Decoloniality, Climate Change, and Ecological Conditions for Future Generations', IDS Bulletin 53.4: 85–100, DOI: 10.19088/1968-2022.140