Mining for Greenlandic Self-Government: Fractal Islands in the Anthropocene
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Mining for Greenlandic Self-Government : Fractal Islands in the Anthropocene. / Hastrup, Frida; Brichet, Nathalia Sofie.
In: Island Studies Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1, 2022, p. 123-140.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Mining for Greenlandic Self-Government
T2 - Fractal Islands in the Anthropocene
AU - Hastrup, Frida
AU - Brichet, Nathalia Sofie
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - This article explores the emergence of Greenland as an Anthropocene island through anthropological fieldwork in and around the decommissioned Nalunaq goldmine in the south of the country. The article takes off from the idea that Anthropocene activities are characterized by the invention, movement, and marketing of seemingly mobile resource units that can be identified and invested in regardless of landscape specificities, and explores how the production of Greenlandic gold complicates this idea of extraction. In particular, the article discusses how Greenlandic post-colonial independence and ambitions for mining both go together and undermine each other, creating new dependencies and relationalities along the way. Through analyzing parts of Nalunaq’s political context, infrastructural challenges, the gold that came out, and eventual closure, the article presents Greenlandic gold mining as a set of partly congruous, partly contradictory practices and ideas. The article thus specifies an extractive project that both is and is not possible on the world’s biggest island, and brings thisto bear on how we might understand the Anthropocene.
AB - This article explores the emergence of Greenland as an Anthropocene island through anthropological fieldwork in and around the decommissioned Nalunaq goldmine in the south of the country. The article takes off from the idea that Anthropocene activities are characterized by the invention, movement, and marketing of seemingly mobile resource units that can be identified and invested in regardless of landscape specificities, and explores how the production of Greenlandic gold complicates this idea of extraction. In particular, the article discusses how Greenlandic post-colonial independence and ambitions for mining both go together and undermine each other, creating new dependencies and relationalities along the way. Through analyzing parts of Nalunaq’s political context, infrastructural challenges, the gold that came out, and eventual closure, the article presents Greenlandic gold mining as a set of partly congruous, partly contradictory practices and ideas. The article thus specifies an extractive project that both is and is not possible on the world’s biggest island, and brings thisto bear on how we might understand the Anthropocene.
U2 - 10.24043/isj.166
DO - 10.24043/isj.166
M3 - Journal article
VL - 17
SP - 123
EP - 140
JO - Island Studies Journal
JF - Island Studies Journal
SN - 1715-2593
IS - 1
ER -
ID: 250226209