Invisibility, Colors, Snow: Arctic Biosemiotics and the Violence of Climate Change

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Abstract

This article conceptualizes contemporary geopolitical violence in the Arctic through a semiotic register. Different living beings perceive different things, and these differences amount to different worlds, not merely different worldviews. Building on Eduardo Kohn’s reading of the semiotics of Charles Sanders Peirce, and theorists of biosemiotics and ecosemiotics, the article analyses how signs in and between living organisms and their environments are political matters of life and death. Via the themes of invisibility, colors, and snow, the article traces semiotic relations between different living beings and their Arctic ecologies to weave a semiotic understanding of contemporary geopolitical violence in the Arctic and the role of climate change therein. The article defines the violence of climate change as a violence of not being able to recognize oneself, and builds on Eduardo Viveiros de Castro’s concept of multinaturalism to explain what it means that one world ruins other worlds.

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APA

du Plessis, G. (2021). Invisibility, Colors, Snow: Arctic Biosemiotics and the Violence of Climate Change. Theory, Culture and Society, 38(7–8), 167–188. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276420976793

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