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Reclaiming accountability from hypertechnocivility, to grow again the flowering Earth Patrick Jones
A predicament At a time when neoliberalism is still widely considered the steady ship in a rocky harbour—a safe vessel in which sits the possibility of transport for our dreams, comfort and desires—where does accountability reside? Have we obfuscated personal, household, community and locasphere1 responsibilities by the way in which we perform our unarguably anthropocentric lifeways? By the way in which we farm out our resource gathering to unknowable, faraway, vested interests? By how these interests extract with a linear, even violent hatred of what Martín Prechtel (1999) calls “the Flowering Earth,” because taking from another isn’t the same thing as taking from one’s own? With western-constructed demands, specifically neoliberalism’s insistence on maintaining an entertaining dominance over all subjects and things, what has happened to our sense of collective purpose that Deborah Bird Rose identifies as “[a]n ethical response to the call of others?” (2011, 18). It appears that a significant limit of the so-called “global village” is a somewhat flippant disregard for the intimacy and sovereignty of a walked and loved homeplace—diverse and animist and not governed exclusively by people. Is it the case today that we are too energetically capable to be intimate with such a place and its many communities? Must we car, bus, train and fly to further fields because we are bored by a now limited sense of what constitutes local as we’ve come to experience “the other” from far away? We might still walk out from the hearth of our dwelling place, and sense a neighbourly warmth with it, but what immediate knowledges of, or relationships with, a flowering locasphere do we possess as we approach our local shopping centre selling originless food, inebriates and other mined and packaged consumables we’ve come to pay money for? Only imperialist cultures place technology and industry ahead of the communities of the living that give agency to the flowerings of the earth2 that make more life possible. In foregrounding technology we have backgrounded our understanding of how our locaspheres function.We have left this work to specialists, to ecologists who sit at desks computing figures and statistics, and after brief “field” trips make general claims about the operations of intimate life from university offices far away. Can we name our neighbouring species, the ones that live in our guts, on our skin, in our mouths and around our homes that contribute to making more life