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7 - Conspiring with the Trees

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2025

Eve Mayes
Affiliation:
Deakin University, Victoria
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Summary

We can't breathe money.

Cardboard placard, Kuala Lumpur, global strikes for climate, 21 September 2019

I speak for the trees so the earth can breathe.

Cardboard placard photographed in Melbourne, global climate strike rally, 20 September 2019

Breathing – absorbing oxygen, releasing carbon dioxide – can be dangerous, for some more than others. In Australia, the ‘unprecedented’ Black Summer bushfires in southeastern Australia in late 2019 and early 2020 burned up to 24 to 40 million hectares across multiple states and territories (Commonwealth of Australia 2020a: 1.12, 1.14). Smoke infiltrated borders of the skin, of fur, of steel and brick and mortar, killing nearly 3 billion vertebrates by incineration, asphyxiation and starvation (World Wildlife Fund 2020). The fires were the direct cause of thirty-three human deaths; their respiratory effects contributed to over 400 other human deaths (Borchers Arriagada et al. 2020). Blanche Verlie (2022a) writes about these fires: ‘In breathing the smoke, we inhaled incinerated ecosystems, and the tiny particles of charred multispecies bodies made their way into our lungs, our blood, our organs, our brains’ (297). These fires, and their effects on breath, fuelled further mass climate justice activism that had already been happening in Australia and across the world.

Before climate justice activism amidst the Black Summer fires in Australia, there had already been other protests against climate inaction in the midst of poor air quality and pollution, and other protests met with respiratory assault; asphyxiation and suffocation were no new phenomena. In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, a protester at the September 2019 global strike for climate held a cardboard placard declaring, ‘We can't breathe money’ (Tee 2019). On the same day, in Delhi, India, a young protester said:

‘We are out here to reclaim our right to live, our right to breathe and our right to exist, which is all being denied to us by an inefficient policy system that gives more deference to industrial and financial objectives rather than environmental standards,’ said Aman Sharma, a young protester in Delhi. (Laville and Watts 2019)

Aman Sharma's eloquent words reverberated later, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, when philosopher Achille Mbembe (2020) proposed a ‘universal right to breathe’ for ‘all life’, including and exceeding humans (61–2).

Type
Chapter
Information
The Politics of Voice in Education
Reforming Schools after Deleuze and Guattari
, pp. 174 - 203
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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