We Fight for this Land
-
Cahal McLaughlin
and Siobhán Wills
Abstract
This article analyses the opportunities and challenges in the filmic representation of the impact of ecoviolence on traditional Quilombola and Ka’apor communities in Brazil’s Amazon as farmers and loggers invade their territories violating the physical and psychological borders of community life, where they have lived and worked for generations. We reflect on the use of participatory practice in the documentary film, We Fight For This Land: Ka’apor and Quilombola Communities in Brazil (2024, 62 mins), in an attempt to address the borders created by differentials in access to resources by filmmakers and participants.
Abstract
This article analyses the opportunities and challenges in the filmic representation of the impact of ecoviolence on traditional Quilombola and Ka’apor communities in Brazil’s Amazon as farmers and loggers invade their territories violating the physical and psychological borders of community life, where they have lived and worked for generations. We reflect on the use of participatory practice in the documentary film, We Fight For This Land: Ka’apor and Quilombola Communities in Brazil (2024, 62 mins), in an attempt to address the borders created by differentials in access to resources by filmmakers and participants.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents VII
-
Part I
- Borders as Translation Spaces 1
- Border Narratives: Crossing Lines and Telling Tales 9
- Geophilosophy of the Border: Beyond Immunitarian Politics 21
- Borders and Neo-Nationalism: A Geophilosophical Approach 37
- We Fight for this Land 51
- Converting the Limit: Jean-Luc Nancy and the Infinite in the Act of Difference 63
- Liminal Places and Non-Places 77
- Border Brushstrokes: The Ulster Arts Club and the Post-Partition Nation 91
- Bordering as the Breaking Force of Border Subjects 101
- Frontiers of Sexual Difference: The Phantasm of Gender 115
- Borders and Language: Hermeneutic-Philosophical Issues 129
- ‘Thou wenest Ich be a beggere’: Borders and the Habitus in Middle English Romance 145
- Funes the Arboreous: Borderless Ecologies in Borges’s Ficciones 157
-
Part II
- Borders and Barbed Wire: Cahir Healy’s Memoirs from the Argenta Prison Ship 171
- A Residue of Boundary Correspondence 183
- Two Years on an Ulster Prison Ship 189
- Contributors and Editors 307
- Index 311
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgements V
- Contents VII
-
Part I
- Borders as Translation Spaces 1
- Border Narratives: Crossing Lines and Telling Tales 9
- Geophilosophy of the Border: Beyond Immunitarian Politics 21
- Borders and Neo-Nationalism: A Geophilosophical Approach 37
- We Fight for this Land 51
- Converting the Limit: Jean-Luc Nancy and the Infinite in the Act of Difference 63
- Liminal Places and Non-Places 77
- Border Brushstrokes: The Ulster Arts Club and the Post-Partition Nation 91
- Bordering as the Breaking Force of Border Subjects 101
- Frontiers of Sexual Difference: The Phantasm of Gender 115
- Borders and Language: Hermeneutic-Philosophical Issues 129
- ‘Thou wenest Ich be a beggere’: Borders and the Habitus in Middle English Romance 145
- Funes the Arboreous: Borderless Ecologies in Borges’s Ficciones 157
-
Part II
- Borders and Barbed Wire: Cahir Healy’s Memoirs from the Argenta Prison Ship 171
- A Residue of Boundary Correspondence 183
- Two Years on an Ulster Prison Ship 189
- Contributors and Editors 307
- Index 311