[Dear nettime, we were old friends. But so much has changed in the
tumultuous decade that's now drawing to a close. Here's what I learned.
It's still tactical media in a way. There's some links at the end. If you
like it, let's collaborate. In any case, good luck to all for the upcoming
years on planet Earth - Brian]

https://anthropocene-curriculum.org/contribution/the-watershed-in-your-head


THE WATERSHED IN YOUR HEAD:
Mapping Anthropocene River Basins

The biogeochemical transformations of the twenty-first century demand a new
analytic of society: not political economy, but political ecology. It's the
study of the technological powers, organizational forms, and
decision-making processes whereby human groups reshape their environments.
But it's also a more difficult and sometimes incalculable approach to the
multiple forms of agency exerted by non-human others, whether on
themselves, on us, or on any other component of the living world. Political
ecology mingles nature and culture in an unlimited feedback system at
planetary scale, with consequences in all directions. How to achieve at
least a beginner's literacy in its manifold concerns? How to express them
with the exactitude of science and the passion of direct engagement? And
how not to exclude the crushing banality of economics, which continues to
produce so many unwanted changes in the earth system? Finally--it's no mere
detail--how to inject the uncertain wonderment of art into this devastating
panorama of ecological overshoot? The questions are immense, but that's the
point. It's time to develop a cultural critique of too-late capitalism, aka
the Anthropocene.

I'm going to give it a try in the first person.

I used to be involved in the critique of political economy and the practice
of tactical media--a cultural cycle that had kicked off back in the '90s.
Then in 2015 I began work on a serious reboot, mixing public science,
environmentalism, and open-source cartography. The idea was to produce a
web-based map about pipelines and oil infrastructure, under the title
Petropolis. I wanted to learn contemporary reality in public, by locating
fossil institutions in lived rural and urban spaces that could expand out
to continental scale, but that could also be explored close up, by groups
deliberately convened for experiments in collective perception. Yet the
confrontation with petroleum infrastructure was paradoxical. On the one
hand, it's absolutely necessary, because the crucial power structures of
Anthropocene society remain functionally invisible, concretely unimaginable
by most people, posing obvious barriers to any conceivable change. But at
the same time, petroleum infrastructure is just plain deadly; it's the
epitome of instrumental rationality divorced from any form of human or
ecological interdependence. When you examine it up close, you become
terribly conscious that the stakes of this economy do not lie contained
within its sprawling infrastructural footprint. Instead they're elsewhere,
everywhere, in a fundamental entanglement with no end in sight. Political
ecology has to begin with that condition.

To go further in a positive way I reached out to a friend with extensive
experience in grassroots eco-advocacy: the artist and activist Alejandro
Meitin, known for his work with the Argentinean group Ala Plastica. We had
an opportunity to do a project together in the context of an exhibition
called The Earth Will Not Abide, about industrial agriculture and land-use
change in the Americas. So we launched an "interbasin collaboration," which
continues up to the present. The aim is to explore watersheds as
laboratories of governance. The first results took the form of a double map
and multimedia archive entitled Living Rivers/Rios Vivos, comparing two
major watersheds in North and South America.

Alejandro brought twenty-five years of knowledge and experience to bear on
the Parana River and its vast drainage basin, the Rio del Plata watershed
extending from the middle of Argentina to Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, and
Brazil. As a comparative greenhorn, all I could do was throw myself body
and soul into the political ecology of the Mississippi River and its
tributaries, which cover roughly 40% of the continental US. Both of us were
focusing on the accelerated land-use change brought by a single phenomenon
that also dates back twenty-five years: genetically modified grain planted
in endless monocrop fields and sprayed from the air with glyphosate, which
is the active ingredient in Monsanto's RoundUp. This weirdly industrial use
of the tranquil countryside has exploded over the last quarter-century, due
especially to the telluric pull of the Chinese soybean market, and more
broadly to the rising global demand for grain-fed meat. How could urban
publics, far away in their bubbles of prosperity and entertainment, begin
to perceive and talk about such things? Artistically we were attempting to
combine embodied experience, social experimentation, political engagement,
and earth-systems science, expressed through the vector of geographic
information systems augmented by multimedia archives and written narratives.

The English-language version of the map, Living Rivers, draws a contrast
between idealized natural biomes and contemporary *anthromes*, or
anthropogenic biomes, whose biophysical characteristics have been reworked
by extensive human intervention. The Spanish-language version, Rios Vivos,
develops a further opposition between recent Latin American coups (golpes)
and age-old relations of reciprocal care (mutua crianza). The political
concerns are specified and articulated by the satellite mapping kit, whose
capacity to integrate diverse forms of perception and analysis is both
fulfilled and critiqued by the multimedia montage of situated
viewpoints--or so we hope anyway. Living Rivers/Rios Vivos is a first step
toward the representation of political ecology. It's an attempt to help
institute a new imaginary of stewardship.

After the relative success of that first collaboration, I started trying to
figure out what just happened. Was some kind of aesthetic or cultural
access to political ecology really emerging? Could a hybrid cartographic
art become an initiatory pathway for social subjects faced with glaring
contradictions between their own life-activities and the viability of the
earth system? Or were these just more vague ideas--a watershed in your
head, with no verifiable connection to politics or ecology?

*Keep it real*

Living in the United States under rapidly decaying political conditions, it
seemed essential to find, not just "principles of hope" (we burned through
those with Obama), but instead, tangible processes of socio-environmental
change that involve broad publics and create new governance routines at
regional scale. Only one place in the US seemed to fill that bill: the
Pacific Northwest, including Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia.
There, generations of inhabitants had absorbed the lessons of
countercultural figures such as Gary Snyder and Peter Berg, who put the
term "bioregionalism" into circulation in the late 1970s. Bioregionalists
insist on locally identifiable watersheds as the most appropriate units of
governance. Some extend beyond the watershed model to larger territories,
including the one called Cascadia: a more-or-less coherent ecozone
transgressing the boundaries of all the existing political units named
above. Back in Illinois, where I live, there's no comparable movement, nor
any such audacious attempt to redraw existing borders. So I set out on a
new cartography project in cahoots with a Portland-based artist and
curator, Mack McFarland. Drawing our inspiration from dozens of partners
and collaborators, we called the project Learning from Cascadia.

As it turns out, Cascadia is also the name that contemporary urban planners
give to the megaregion that sprawls from Eugene, Oregon, to Vancouver,
British Columbia. I wanted to construct the map as a perceptual field
stretching between these two imaginary figures, the megaregion and the
bioregion. In the middle there would be a third outline: the scientifically
established boundaries of the Columbia River watershed, which extends north
into British Columbia and serves as an administrative framework for the
region's hydroelectric dams. This more neutral frame could be applied not
only to state administration, but also to the activism of civil-society
groups like Columbia Riverkeeper, with whom we directly collaborated. The
thing is, there's nothing neutral about the political debates that have
arisen in the Columbia watershed. Most of those struggles stretch way back
to colonization, whose long shadow still hangs over the future.

For settler capital, the river is a watery highway permitting the transport
of wheat, fertilizer, and coal. Its last two hundred kilometers are
deepwater ports where fossil fuels can be shipped off to Asia. Its very
current is not water, but electricity. Meanwhile, the dams that make the
river navigable literally drown and silence many of the cascades and
waterfalls on which Native American life formerly depended. Through their
deadly effects on charismatic regional species, especially the Pacific
Salmon, the dams bring home the consequences of industrial modernization
during the twentieth century. Knowledge like that can lead to action.
Ecological concerns, with all their historical underpinnings, are live
political issues in Cascadia.

Here's a discovery I made: both the Mississippi and Columbia watersheds
became part of the technological and organizational complex of the wartime
state, by way of parallel "engineer districts," Oak Ridge and Hanford.
Located in remote areas near ample supplies of cooling water and
electricity, both sites were used for the production and enrichment of
weapons-grade nuclear materials during the Second World War, and then
onward through the Cold War. What's more, in both regions massive aluminum
smelters were installed to take advantage of the cheap power provided by
the dams. Late twentieth-century economic development came at that price,
and the thing I never realized was that it came straight out of the rivers.
It's sobering to realize that the "clean energy" of hydroelectricity was
one of the crucial technological factors behind what's now called the Great
Acceleration of the 1950s. That explosion of capitalist economic growth now
threatens the existence of all species.

The Hanford site, in particular, has been a focus of tenacious citizen and
tribal activism aiming to insure that costly remediation programs are not
simply abandoned in favor of cheaper stopgap measures. This is a tragic
struggle waged on the terrain of a lavish technocracy, the
multibazillion-a-year nuclear cleanup gang. It takes long-term courage to
embrace such a difficult cause within such an ambiguous context, but people
do it and they sometimes win.

In any case it's not invisible radiation, but the vanishing salmon runs
that have been the greatest spur to action. Attempts to save the fish and
their ecosystems have led to complex collaborations between native tribes,
traditional conservationists, and modern-day ecologists seeking the
restoration of species diversity in riverine environments. The tribes have
often taken leadership of the process, using their limited but real
sovereignty to bring new issues to the negotiating tables. All this has led
to original forms of political representation and governmental action,
including the transformation of an old bioregional dream, the watershed
council, into an official institution of the state of Oregon. The lesson is
clear: only large-scale social movements, underwritten by the circulation
of shareable cultural traits and empowered by new forms of ecological
expertise, can gain the capacity to challenge the fossil institutions of
industrial modernism. As the map/archive shows, such movements breathe
political life into the abstract contrast between megaregional and
bioregional patterns of development.

Learning from Cascadia demonstrates the scope and intensity of a
contemporary bioregional politics. It uses interviews and artistic
collaborations to flesh out the ecological restoration and stewardship
practices that lie at the heart of the bioregional imaginary. Yet something
vital was still missing from our project: the capacity to directly involve
social subjects with the world-making potentials of political ecology. Mack
McFarland and I decided that was the next thing to be learned. An inkling
of how it could be done--and an approach to the Anthropocene River--is
provided by the last project I'll discuss here, which is again a
collaboration with Alejandro Meitin.

*Take it to the islands*

Like the Mississippi and the Columbia, the Parana River is conceived by the
corporate state as a watery highway, a hidrovia, to be dredged, dammed, and
managed for the needs of barges and deep-sea freighters carrying national
commodities to the world market. Unlike the Mississippi, however, the
Parana has not been walled up with levees for the needs of floodplain
agriculture. Instead it retains a natural delta about 300 kilometers long
and up to 60 kilometers wide, consisting of braided river channels and
densely vegetated islands--an emerald ecoregion, visible as such from the
air. Anyone familiar with the stark divides between water and land imposed
by the Mississippi levees, or with the emaciated, sediment-starved delta
areas around New Orleans, cannot help but gasp with wonder at this
grandiose world of wood, mud, and water, which is also home to very
particular forms of human existence.

After the dispossession of the area from its original inhabitants, the
Parana Delta became a refuge for impoverished settlers without land or
employment, known as islenos. They built wooden houses on stilts that could
survive the floods, and developed simple economic practices in tune with
the surrounding environment. Yet the Pampa Humeda through which the river
flows is one of the most productive agricultural regions on earth, and
local environmentalists have clearly identified the risk of massive
land-use change, which they call "continentalization." To guard against
it--and to gather forces for long-term struggles against the damming and
draining of the great Pantanal wetlands at the headwaters of the
river--Latin American activists have been experimenting with new forms of
mobilization, including the kind of territorial artistic activism that
Alejandro Meitin is now developing with Casa Rio, a small house located on
the edge of the Rio del Plata estuary that connects the Parana to the open
ocean.

In mid-2018, Alejandro, myself, and the artist Graciela Carnevale--known
for her participation in the '68-era activist project Tucuman Arde--began
preparing a unique kind of exhibition project, to be staged in a three
long, brick-lined tunnels that formerly served as entrepots in the
grain-exporting city of Rosario, located along the banks of the Parana. The
show combined the works of The Earth Will Not Abide, where the
collaboration between Alejandro and I had begun, with a selection of
artifacts and documents from earlier ecological art experiments in the
region. At its heart, however, was a more unusual program which I think
will be intriguing for anyone involved in the current Anthropocene River
project.

What the Argentines did--on a somewhat smaller scale than the Mississippi
project, but with the extraordinary degree of social cooperation that
prevails among the country's grassroots organizations--was to organize five
groups, each including inhabitants, environmentalists, and artists, to
carry out five exploratory campaigns at different sites in the islands and
along the estuary. After that, each group set about producing an artistic
representation of their experience, which was sometimes expressed by the
professional artists, or in other cases turned into a social experiment
among various kinds of people. The resulting works were installed in the
central tunnel of the old entrepot where they became the stage-set for a
two-day conversation bringing together around forty significant figures
from the delta conservation community, whether inhabitants,
environmentalists, NGO activists, experts from both government and civil
society, or artists who had participated in one of the five campaigns. Much
of the conversation revolved around current problems facing the delta, as
well as future actions to address them. In this way the whole thing became
a kind of community milestone within a far larger cultural and political
process, which neither began nor ended with the show.

My own role at Casa Rio was to curate the Spanish-language version of The
Earth Will Not Abide, which was made in hopes of exactly this kind of
collaboration. But in addition to that, during the preceding year I had
discovered the work of a Seattle-based group called Mapseed, which is
developing some exceptionally useful collaborative software for ecological
and social issues. Their stuff, which is open source and can handle almost
any kind of complex cartographic data, turned out to be modeled on a
project entitled Que Pasa Riachuelo?, made in the early 2010s for citizen
oversight of a river-cleanup process on the edge of Buenos Aires. In fact,
the authors of that map, from a group called M7red, were participating in
our project! The Mapseed team generously agreed to work with us on a
shoestring budget, and we developed something like a multimedia geo-blog
focusing on the five campaign sites, but open to unstructured community
input. The theme was "collaborative territories" (Territorios de
colaboracion). Obviously there was one big question: Would anybody use it?
One day I opened the map and saw that a wetlands enthusiast from the
Rosario area had gone out to the islands in a small boat to film a
bulldozer engaged in the illegal drainage of public property for private
agricultural use--an elemental expression of the process of
"continentalization" decried by the environmentalists.

Now it all seemed to be coming together: coalitions of diverse groups,
multiple intersecting forms of knowledge, avenues for grassroots
participation. This was the kind of cartography that Felix Guattari used to
theorize: not just a tactical media machine, but an emergent social form at
grips with matters of political ecology.

*Back to the Big Muddy*

"Where you at?" the bioregionalists used to ask. They wanted to know where
your water comes from and where your garbage goes, what soil series you're
standing on, which wildflower blooms first in your area. Today we again
want to know those kinds of things, which have become the artistic and
cultural preoccupations of a generation. But the concept of the
Anthropocene asks about the irrevocable fusion of nature and humanity, and
about the consequences it brings. "Where you at?" still involves knowing
the names of local plants, but they're also technological ones, such as
factories, refineries, sewage-treatment facilities, etc. For US citizens
conscious of the damage our corporate and military state is currently doing
in the world, there is an urgent need to understand the patterns of
so-called development here at home. An "interbasin collaboration" with
watersheds in Europe could also help, because most of those American
patterns emerged through the long history of European colonization. White
supremacy, or the refusal to recognize and co-inhabit with the other, is a
shared cultural trait whose dissolution is the key to any viable future.

So finally I'll bring in the first person plural.

Mississippi: An Anthropocene River is a continental-scale project organized
by the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin, in collaboration with a
multitude of artists, researchers, institutions and grassroots groups in
the United States. We're doing this right now in the flesh. It's not just a
map but an emergent social form. It takes the Big Muddy as an object of
cultural critique. Yet we all know such an "object" cannot be held at arm's
length. Instead it's a political ecology where the observing subject is
always part of the observed. Murky waters are living ones. The evolving
cartographies presented here are an invitation to get involved, as if you
weren't already. "Put it on the map" seems like such a simple action,
without any knock-on effects. But the watershed in your head doesn't just
stay there.

So let's change the map, very respectfully, very precisely and very soon,
before everyone loses the territory.


* * *


Some works and references:

*Maps*

https://mississippi.rivertoday.org

http://environmentalobservatory.net/Petropolis/map.html

http://ecotopia.today/livingrivers/map.html

https://cascadia.ecotopia.today

https://mapa.casarioarteyambiente.org


*Websites*

http://ecotopia.today

https://www.casarioarteyambiente.org

https://www.regionalrelationships.org/tewna

https://anthropocene-curriculum.org
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