'It's a conspiracy theory and climate change': of beastly encounters and cervine disappearances in Himalayan India

Mathur, Nayanika (2015) 'It's a conspiracy theory and climate change': of beastly encounters and cervine disappearances in Himalayan India. Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 5 (1). pp. 87-111. ISSN 2049-1115

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Abstract

This article traces the introduction of the category of climate change into the Indian Himalaya. Climate change emerged as an explanation for recurring incidences of humananimal conflict and the disappearance of a protected species through the labors of the local state bureaucracy. Even as the narratives on climate change were being imbued with expert authority, counternarratives dealing with the very same phenomena voiced by long-term residents of the Himalayas were summarily dismissed by the state as constituting mere conspiracy theories. This article accords both these narratives equal space and details the effects of the explanatory force of climate change in this region. On the basis of ethnography centered on humans, big cats, bears, and musk deer, it argues for an enhanced ethnographic attention to the political work done in the name of climate change. The article questions the analytic utility of the concept of the Anthropocene and ends by outlining certain distinctive characteristics of climate change as a concept and call to act upon the world.

Item Type: Article
Schools and Departments: School of Global Studies > Anthropology
Depositing User: Sharon Krummel
Date Deposited: 13 Feb 2017 14:13
Last Modified: 02 Jul 2019 18:23
URI: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/66704

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