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Living with Earthquakes and Angry Deities at the Himalayan Borderlands

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  • Mabel Denzin Gergan

Abstract

The Indian Himalayan Region, a climate change hotspot, is witnessing a massive surge in hydropower development alongside a dramatic rise in natural hazard events. This article explores indigenous people's response to this intersection of concerns around hazards and contentious development beyond more legible instances of social movements or resistance. Through an ethnographic case study located in the Eastern Himalayan state of Sikkim, the site of a 6.9 magnitude earthquake, controversial hydropower projects, and an indigenous antidam protest, I show how people's relationship with a sacred, animate landscape is not easily translatable into the clear goals of environmental politics. Antidam activists and environmentalists link growing ecological precarity in Sikkim to state-led hydropower construction, but for many lay indigenous people, these earthquakes raise deeper cultural anxieties. I demonstrate how these anxieties are grounded in a longer history of the contested relationship between marginalized peoples and hegemonic state and nonstate powers, a relationship that continues in the fraught relationship of the Himalayan margins to the Indian state. I argue that critical engagements with indigenous environmentalism must be in dialogue with diverse interpretations and registers of loss and erasure. In this I follow recent calls to decolonize the Anthropocene that demand that we move beyond a politics of urgency to examine the slow, historical processes of erasure under colonialism and imperialism. I highlight these narratives to argue for a more holistic approach to the uneven impacts of climate change on mountainous environments and their inhabitants.

Suggested Citation

  • Mabel Denzin Gergan, 2017. "Living with Earthquakes and Angry Deities at the Himalayan Borderlands," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 107(2), pages 490-498, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:107:y:2017:i:2:p:490-498
    DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2016.1209103
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    Cited by:

    1. Roger Few & Hazel Marsh & Garima Jain & Chandni Singh & Mark Glyn Llewellyn Tebboth, 2021. "Representing Recovery: How the Construction and Contestation of Needs and Priorities Can Shape Long-term Outcomes for Disaster-affected People," Progress in Development Studies, , vol. 21(1), pages 7-25, January.
    2. Ritodhi Chakraborty & Pasang Yangjee Sherpa, 2021. "From climate adaptation to climate justice: Critical reflections on the IPCC and Himalayan climate knowledges," Climatic Change, Springer, vol. 167(3), pages 1-14, August.
    3. Noel Mariam George, 2023. "Reflections on Multidisciplinary Scholarship in the Study of Himalayan Borders and Borderlands," India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs, , vol. 79(1), pages 109-127, March.
    4. Scoville-Simonds, Morgan & Jamali, Hameed & Hufty, Marc, 2020. "The Hazards of Mainstreaming: Climate change adaptation politics in three dimensions," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 125(C).
    5. Scoville-Simonds, Morgan, 2018. "Climate, the Earth, and God – Entangled narratives of cultural and climatic change in the Peruvian Andes," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 110(C), pages 345-359.

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