Nostalgia for la montaña: The production of landscape at the frontier of chilean commercial forestry
Author
dc.contributor.author
Manuschevich, Daniela
Author
dc.contributor.author
Gurr, Mel
Author
dc.contributor.author
Ramírez Pascualli, Carlos A.
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2021-07-01T23:23:26Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2021-07-01T23:23:26Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2020
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
Journal of Rural Studies 80 (2020) 211–221
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.09.010
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/180359
Abstract
dc.description.abstract
Chile has a well-documented structural dependence upon resource extraction, yet less is known about the social
and symbolic significance of the environmental changes related to such a dependence. Since 1973, Chile’s timber
plantation complex increased nearly seven-fold in terms of area, prompting deep socioecological transformations
in the countryside. In this paper, we focus on the workings of memory and nostalgia among peasant farmers
living at the fringes of tree-farm expansion. Based on qualitative research and participatory mapping in three
mountainous villages, our main argument focuses on the affective dimensions of land use change, particularly
that nostalgia resists the symbolic reproduction of monocultures, while its absence seems to accept tree farms as
an unescapable, unfolding process. We characterize three peasant categories of landscape: la monta˜na (native
forest), el monte (successional forest), and el bosque (timber plantations). The peasants’ use of the words monta˜na
and bosque is of particular interest, as it counters the false discursive equivalence between timber plantations and
forests that has been adopted by forestry and climate-change policymakers alike. Our case provides an in-depth
analysis of the ways rural dwellers inhabit monocultured landscape, entangled with memories and emotions.
Paying attention to gendered and intergenerational dynamics, as timber farm expansion has taken place over the
last forty years, our results have the potential to inform ongoing discussion of mitigation policies based on global
afforestation in the Global South.