Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park

In this essay, I argue that steam operates as a critical, other-than-human actor in the establishment of Yellowstone National Park and a broader, colonial posture towards the natural world that reflects a sharp division between nature and culture on the settler landscape—reiterating what Marisol de...

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Autor principal: Chelsea Graham
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Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:2159f5b88aa84612804501f9dad822f32021-11-11T08:48:53ZResisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park2297-900X10.3389/fcomm.2021.722527https://doaj.org/article/2159f5b88aa84612804501f9dad822f32021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2021.722527/fullhttps://doaj.org/toc/2297-900XIn this essay, I argue that steam operates as a critical, other-than-human actor in the establishment of Yellowstone National Park and a broader, colonial posture towards the natural world that reflects a sharp division between nature and culture on the settler landscape—reiterating what Marisol de la Cadena and Mario Blaser call “the world of the powerful,” and a “world where only one world fits” (2018, pp 2-3). By appearing in contradictory contexts of powerful engines and pristine nature, steam was bifurcated into natural and cultural registers in order to justify the establishment of the natural park and the colonists’ claim to Yellowstone as “property,” foreclosing alternative relationships to the land such as those of the region’s Indigenous residents. Approaching this research from the perspective of a settler on Indigenous lands, I am invested in engaging new materialist and ecological methodologies in the important work of decolonial critique. Adopting Nathan Stormer’s (2016) “new materialist genealogy” and Nathaniel Rivers’ (2015) treatment of wildness in service of a decolonial agenda, I demonstrate how steam’s inherent repulsion to nature/culture dichotomies contests the very idea of the park itself, Yellowstone’s importance to the settler state’s expansion into the west, and its popular understanding as an exemplar of environmental politics. Further, this essay provides a methodological and theoretical intervention for new materialist and ecological scholarship to support decolonial projects in solidarity with Indigenous resistance. By unraveling dominant discourses that persist in collective identification with Yellowstone, the borders of the park that denote iconicity and exemplarity, unspoiled nature from capitalist development, become brittle, fragile, and so, too, does their dominance in discourses about environmentalism. By disrupting Yellowstone and undermining its dominance, we can demonstrate, unequivocally, that another world—indeed worlds—are possible.Chelsea GrahamFrontiers Media S.A.articlenature/culture divideYellowstone National Parkepistemologyenvironmental humanitiesecological rhetoricsettler colonial archivesCommunication. Mass mediaP87-96ENFrontiers in Communication, Vol 6 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic nature/culture divide
Yellowstone National Park
epistemology
environmental humanities
ecological rhetoric
settler colonial archives
Communication. Mass media
P87-96
spellingShingle nature/culture divide
Yellowstone National Park
epistemology
environmental humanities
ecological rhetoric
settler colonial archives
Communication. Mass media
P87-96
Chelsea Graham
Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
description In this essay, I argue that steam operates as a critical, other-than-human actor in the establishment of Yellowstone National Park and a broader, colonial posture towards the natural world that reflects a sharp division between nature and culture on the settler landscape—reiterating what Marisol de la Cadena and Mario Blaser call “the world of the powerful,” and a “world where only one world fits” (2018, pp 2-3). By appearing in contradictory contexts of powerful engines and pristine nature, steam was bifurcated into natural and cultural registers in order to justify the establishment of the natural park and the colonists’ claim to Yellowstone as “property,” foreclosing alternative relationships to the land such as those of the region’s Indigenous residents. Approaching this research from the perspective of a settler on Indigenous lands, I am invested in engaging new materialist and ecological methodologies in the important work of decolonial critique. Adopting Nathan Stormer’s (2016) “new materialist genealogy” and Nathaniel Rivers’ (2015) treatment of wildness in service of a decolonial agenda, I demonstrate how steam’s inherent repulsion to nature/culture dichotomies contests the very idea of the park itself, Yellowstone’s importance to the settler state’s expansion into the west, and its popular understanding as an exemplar of environmental politics. Further, this essay provides a methodological and theoretical intervention for new materialist and ecological scholarship to support decolonial projects in solidarity with Indigenous resistance. By unraveling dominant discourses that persist in collective identification with Yellowstone, the borders of the park that denote iconicity and exemplarity, unspoiled nature from capitalist development, become brittle, fragile, and so, too, does their dominance in discourses about environmentalism. By disrupting Yellowstone and undermining its dominance, we can demonstrate, unequivocally, that another world—indeed worlds—are possible.
format article
author Chelsea Graham
author_facet Chelsea Graham
author_sort Chelsea Graham
title Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
title_short Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
title_full Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
title_fullStr Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
title_full_unstemmed Resisting “the World of the Powerful”: “Wild” Steam and the Creation of Yellowstone National Park
title_sort resisting “the world of the powerful”: “wild” steam and the creation of yellowstone national park
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/2159f5b88aa84612804501f9dad822f3
work_keys_str_mv AT chelseagraham resistingtheworldofthepowerfulwildsteamandthecreationofyellowstonenationalpark
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