2022
DOI: 10.1080/0966369x.2022.2091522
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The secret and gendered lives of the underground

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…An important subset of literature expanding the political and conceptual lens of extractivism has been that within feminist political economy and ecofeminist critique, delineating the various gendered effects of resource extractivism (Elodie Behzadi, 2019; Lahiri‐Dutt, 2022; Ukeje, 2005; Endeley, 2010) and unpacking the gendering of extractive geographies within ongoing practices of coloniality and neo‐imperial geopolitics (Murrey and Jackson, 2020). This scholarship builds from the experiences of the people most directly impacted by extractivist paradigms, including Indigenous, Black, working class, rural women and more to show that ‘the impacts of extractivism‐based development are deeply sex‐gendered ones’ (Hargreaves, 2019, p. 63).…”
Section: Decolonial and Black Geographies Against Extractivismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An important subset of literature expanding the political and conceptual lens of extractivism has been that within feminist political economy and ecofeminist critique, delineating the various gendered effects of resource extractivism (Elodie Behzadi, 2019; Lahiri‐Dutt, 2022; Ukeje, 2005; Endeley, 2010) and unpacking the gendering of extractive geographies within ongoing practices of coloniality and neo‐imperial geopolitics (Murrey and Jackson, 2020). This scholarship builds from the experiences of the people most directly impacted by extractivist paradigms, including Indigenous, Black, working class, rural women and more to show that ‘the impacts of extractivism‐based development are deeply sex‐gendered ones’ (Hargreaves, 2019, p. 63).…”
Section: Decolonial and Black Geographies Against Extractivismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Underground spaces have also been metaphoric and concrete spaces of subversion of hierarchies (Cohen, 2023). Lahiri-Dutt (2012, 2022) describes how mining spaces can provide “secret” opportunities for women to express collective agency. In Bolivia and India, much like Victorian Britain, states tried to ban women from mining spaces due to feared subversion.…”
Section: Myths Meanings and Subsurface Cultural Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If such a focus on technical and political mediation and construction might seem like an unfashionable return to poststructuralism, opportunities abound for working past the ocular through a broadening of embodied understandings of sensation, phenomenological, or otherwise. For those who work or seek fun underground, accounts of the sensorium must be expanded to smell (Lahiri-Dutt, 2022), soundscapes and music (Coyne, 2023; DeSilvey, 2010; Zhang and Crang, 2016), and embodied touch and texture (Marston, 2021). Artists (Kanngieser and Gibb, 2019) and engineers (Reddy, 2023) alike are attuned to visualizing and “sonifying” vibrations beneath the surface.…”
Section: Opacity Knowledge and Sensing The Subsurfacementioning
confidence: 99%
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