Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time

This essay poses three questions with regard to the studies presented in this special issue. What lessons regarding class politics do we draw from these studies of community and its crisis in Wood Buffalo? How are we to assess and understand the prolixity of the rhetoric of community in this context...

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Main Author: Mookerjea, Sourayan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology, University of Alberta 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/19893
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spelling ftunivalbertaojs:oai:ejournals.library.ualberta.ca:article/19893 2023-05-15T16:17:38+02:00 Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time Mookerjea, Sourayan 2013-06-22 application/pdf http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/19893 eng eng Department of Sociology, University of Alberta http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/19893/15417 Canadian Journal of Sociology; Vol 38, No 2 (2013); 233-254 1710-1123 0318–6431 community studies commons tar sands/oil sands multitude subaltern class info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2013 ftunivalbertaojs 2016-05-08T20:29:09Z This essay poses three questions with regard to the studies presented in this special issue. What lessons regarding class politics do we draw from these studies of community and its crisis in Wood Buffalo? How are we to assess and understand the prolixity of the rhetoric of community in this context? How do the crises and contradictions of tar sands development in Fort McMurray, Alberta enable us to retheorize the concept of community itself? Bringing into critical juxtaposition postcolonial studies on subalternity with the alterglobalization literature on the multitude, this essay searches for the historical content of the truth that binds political rhetoric enabling various social movements to act in solidarity in opposing tar sands development, and interrogates the community of politics that this politics of community seems to promise. In doing so, the essay argues for the importance of an Utopian social poetics of mediation to the project of a sociology of absences. Article in Journal/Newspaper Fort McMurray Wood Buffalo University of Alberta: Journal Hosting Fort McMurray Wood Buffalo ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alberta: Journal Hosting
op_collection_id ftunivalbertaojs
language English
topic community studies
commons
tar sands/oil sands
multitude
subaltern
class
spellingShingle community studies
commons
tar sands/oil sands
multitude
subaltern
class
Mookerjea, Sourayan
Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
topic_facet community studies
commons
tar sands/oil sands
multitude
subaltern
class
description This essay poses three questions with regard to the studies presented in this special issue. What lessons regarding class politics do we draw from these studies of community and its crisis in Wood Buffalo? How are we to assess and understand the prolixity of the rhetoric of community in this context? How do the crises and contradictions of tar sands development in Fort McMurray, Alberta enable us to retheorize the concept of community itself? Bringing into critical juxtaposition postcolonial studies on subalternity with the alterglobalization literature on the multitude, this essay searches for the historical content of the truth that binds political rhetoric enabling various social movements to act in solidarity in opposing tar sands development, and interrogates the community of politics that this politics of community seems to promise. In doing so, the essay argues for the importance of an Utopian social poetics of mediation to the project of a sociology of absences.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mookerjea, Sourayan
author_facet Mookerjea, Sourayan
author_sort Mookerjea, Sourayan
title Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
title_short Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
title_full Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
title_fullStr Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
title_full_unstemmed Epilogue: Through the Forest of Time
title_sort epilogue: through the forest of time
publisher Department of Sociology, University of Alberta
publishDate 2013
url http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/19893
long_lat ENVELOPE(-112.007,-112.007,57.664,57.664)
geographic Fort McMurray
Wood Buffalo
geographic_facet Fort McMurray
Wood Buffalo
genre Fort McMurray
Wood Buffalo
genre_facet Fort McMurray
Wood Buffalo
op_source Canadian Journal of Sociology; Vol 38, No 2 (2013); 233-254
1710-1123
0318–6431
op_relation http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/CJS/article/view/19893/15417
_version_ 1766003524589584384