Pratt, M. L. Coda.
Pratt, M. L. Coda.
Pratt, M. L. Coda.
CONCEPT
AND CHRONOTOPE
Mary Louise Pratt
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G170 ● Mary Louise Pratt
puzzled because the more deeply he digs, the more highly developed
the culture becomes. He has found the Anthropocene, avant la lettre.
Once again, art precedes life.
What is at stake in these essays is not what the Anthropocene is but
how it will be lived. Whether the stratigraphic authorities authorize the
term will make no difference. In this respect, “Anthropocene” is what
Deleuze and Guattari would call a concept. “All concepts,” they say,
“are connected to problems without which they would have no mean-
ing, and which can themselves only be understood as their solution
emerges.”2 As Elizabeth Grosz elaborates, this means that concepts
are never true; they only enable. “Concepts are ways of adding ideal-
ity to the world,” she explains, “transforming the givenness of chaos,
the pressing problem, into various forms of order, into possibilities
for being.”3 They “enable us to surround ourselves with possibilities of
being otherwise.”4 The point of “Anthropocene” is to enable reflection
in Western academic circuits on what this volume calls “arts for living
on a damaged planet.” The concept starts a conversation on “what we
humans are going to do now, in the midst of an increasingly given fate
of ruination and extinction” (Bubandt).
For most of the writers here, the question of how to live the Anthro-
pocene is inseparable from the question of how to write it. Indeed,
writing becomes the way of posing the question of how to live. The
Anthropocene is also what narrative theorist Mikhail Bakhtin called a
chronotope, a particular configuration of time and space that generates
stories through which a society can examine itself. Bakhtin studied
novels. “In the literary artistic chronotope,” said Bakhtin, “spatial and
temporal indicators are fused into one carefully thought-out, concrete
whole. Time, as it were, thickens, takes on flesh, becomes artistically
visible; likewise, space becomes charged and responsible to the move-
ments of time, plot and history. The intersection of axes and fusion of
indicators characterizes the artistic chronotope.”5 New chronotopes,
Bakhtin said, create “previously nonexistent meanings.” Old ones
“continue stubbornly to exist” even after they have “lost any meaning
that was productive in actuality or adequate to later historical situa-
tions.”6 The Revenant recycles the frontier chronotope, a time-space
configuration that generates plot after plot of gendered whiteness. The
Anthropocene creates a new chronotope with a multipolar time-space
configuration. The human in the present imagines a subject who, long
after humans are gone, reconstructs our era through what it will have
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At the foot of the lofty granitic range which, in the early ages of our planet,
resisted the irruption of the waters on the formation of the Caribbean gulf,
extends a vast and boundless plain.
I cannot be the only one who hears the echo of Humboldt in Bubandt—
and the same impulse to enchant. (Students of literature learn that
the raw material for writing is other writing.) Apocalypses are the ter-
ritory of the poetics of the sublime, the merging of beauty and terror.
That is the shimmer Brown finds in the ghastly underworld of Cher-
nobyl or the ghastly trace of Madame Curie’s radioactive fingers on
her notebook in a library in Japan. Alongside these new naturalists, it
becomes easy to imagine an Anthropocenic flâneur who remakes the
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Notes
1. Accepting the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role in the film,
Leonardo DiCaprio spoke of its allusion to the climate change e mergency.
2. Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, What Is Philosophy? (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1994), 16. Cited in Elizabeth Grosz, Becom-
ing Undone: Darwinian Reflections on Life, Politics, and Art (Durham,
N.C.: Duke University Press, 2011), 78.
3. Grosz, Becoming Undone, 78.
4. Ibid.
5. Mikhail Bakhtin, “Forms of Time and of the Chronotope in the Novel,”
in The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays (Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1981), 84.
6. Ibid., 85.
7. Her compatriot, feminist philosopher Elizabeth Grosz, makes the same
point, also in reference to Australian Aboriginal painting and to her
interactions with a group of women painters. Grosz, Becoming Undone,
part III.
8. Cáceres was a leader of the four-hundred-thousand-member Lenca
indigenous people. She was awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize
in 2015 for leading a successful struggle to stop a huge Chinese hydro-
electric project in Honduras. She was forty years old and a mother of
four.