Abstract

This collaborative project draws from research carried out by Ursula Biemann and Paulo Tavares in the oil-and-mining frontier in the Ecuadorian Amazon—one of the most biodiverse and mineral-rich regions on earth, currently under pressure from the dramatic expansion of large-scale extraction activities. At the heart of forest law is a series of landmark legal cases that bring the forest to court and plead for the rights of nature. One particularly paradigmatic trial has recently been won by the indigenous people of Sarayuku based on their cosmology of the living forest. Forest Law is a synchronized video projection shot with two cameras, a photo-text assemblage unfolding the background to these cases, and an artist book. Taken together, the collection of personal testimonies and factual evidence presented here exposes the multiple dimensions of the tropical forest as a physical, legal, and cosmological entity. Forest law has been realized in a close reading of Serres (1995) The Natural Contract. The text also makes reference to Stengers’s (1995) “Cosmopolitical Proposal” and draws from it a theory for an aesthetic engagement with the rainforest.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call