{"id":454,"date":"2024-04-16T11:20:44","date_gmt":"2024-04-16T11:20:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/?p=454"},"modified":"2025-06-26T18:02:01","modified_gmt":"2025-06-26T18:02:01","slug":"plotting-practices-of-ambiguity-patricia-de-vries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/?p=454","title":{"rendered":"Plot(ting): Practices of Ambiguity &#8212; Patricia de Vries"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>There is another world, but it is inside this one.<br>\u2014Paul \u00c9luard<sup data-fn=\"be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7\" id=\"be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7-link\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Human beings are magical. Bios and Logos. Words made flesh, muscle and bone animated by hope and desire, belief materialized in deeds, deeds which crystallize our actualities. . . . And the maps of spring always have to be redrawn again, in undared forms.<br>\u2014Sylvia Wynter<sup data-fn=\"b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8\" id=\"b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8-link\">2<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>How do artists intervene in capitalist structures, such as cities, urban developments, institutes and infrastructures, and reinterpret and reclaim spaces and spatial relationships? How do artists and artistic researchers define their ground and forge spaces while evading being co-opted by the systems they aim to overcome?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Plot(ting)<\/em> builds on Jamaican novelist and theorist Sylvia Wynter\u2019s rich notion of \u201cthe plot.\u201d Allocated by plantation owners to minimise costs and boost profits, plots were the provision grounds that enslaved Africans were permitted to cultivate. Situated away from plantation villages, these plots allowed the cultivation of food on land that was often rugged and of poor quality. Here, the enslaved found a way to collaborate, maintaining a degree of independence from the brutality of plantation life. These plots were not utopian refuges, isolated from the plantation\u2019s violence. Rather, they were constantly in danger of violence and destruction by planters and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=rlecPxHWkYY\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">overseers<\/a>.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter describes the plot and the plantation as distinct yet intertwined entities. The plot offered a space for alternative knowledge systems, resistance to commodification, and the perpetuation of African and indigenous cultures and traditions. Yet plots were also products of the plantation; the relation between the provision ground and the plantation is ambivalent, a source of alienation and potential resistance. Wynter\u2019s scholarly discussion of the plot is also ambivalent. It is a historical reality <em>and<\/em> a metaphor. \u201cPlot\u201d is a noun referring to a physical space <em>and<\/em> a verb for decolonial practice. It also refers to counter-narratives and what she calls \u201cunder life\u201d culture.<sup data-fn=\"0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98\" id=\"0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98-link\">3<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While Wynter\u2019s notion of the plot has gained recognition across various disciplines, there\u2019s potential for further exploration into its applications in and ramifications for the arts.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Engaging with Wynter\u2019s insights, <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> investigates the plot as a model for artistic practice in the broadest sense, examining how artists, writers, and scholars can challenge institutional and capitalist norms to foster different forms of understanding, being, and social relation. Collecting and bringing together scholarly and artistic initiatives that resonate with Wynter\u2019s concept of the plot, <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> aims to propagate endeavours that establish forms of relationality beyond capitalist confines, acting as a testament to the power of decolonial and counter-hegemonic practices, narratives, and forms of resistance. By viewing the plot as a vehicle for investigation, <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> invites contemplation on the conditions that could nurture plots, advocating for varied perspectives, knowledge forms, and relational models. These contributions illuminate alternative possibilities and highlight the transient nature of such spaces, practices, narratives, and interactions.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Contributions to <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> cover various subjects and objects, from Dutch domestic colonies and the recalcitrant materiality of mud to personal letter exchanges and European work songs, pushing the boundaries of disciplines and surpassing conventional narratives.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Consider, for example, designer and artist Mariana Mart\u00ednez Balvanera\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/?p=120\">contribution<\/a>. It reflects upon the transdisciplinary practice of Cocina Colaboratorio, a collective of cooks, artists, farmers, and scholars that question notions of individual property and ownership within food and knowledge production. Balvanera adopts an ethical approach to her work derived from the \u201cteachings\u201d of <em>comunidad<\/em>, an indigenous approach to social organisation and production still practiced in some communities in Mexico. The teachings of <em>communidad<\/em> include practices of commoning, shared responsibility towards land, and protecting (agro)biodiversity. One such practice is <em>tequio<\/em>, a way of organising collective and reciprocal work or mutual aid wherein groups of people come together to perform various tasks for the benefit of the community. <em>Tequio<\/em> embodies the values of solidarity, cooperation, and shared responsibility, fostering a sense of unity and opposing individualism. Balvanera shows how it is practised in the interstices of three Mexican cities\u2014Oaxaca, San Cristobal de las Casas, and Mexico City\u2014which are increasingly regulated, privatised, financialised, and touristified. &nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Or take choreographer and artist Flavia Pinheiro\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/?p=111\">performance<\/a>. Pinheiro\u2019s work navigates \u201cin vitro\u201d experiences\u2014instances sequestered and removed from their vibrant, living origins\u2014and \u201cin vivo\u201d explorations that are immersed in the lively tapestry of community and shared stories. \u201cIn vitro\u201d translates from Latin to \u201cwithin the glass.\u201d In Pinheiro\u2019s context, this concept symbolises arts spaces: the confines of a studio or indoor settings are often detached from broader societal realities. Pinheiro actively collaborates with a diverse mix of human and non-human partners to counter this isolation, fostering a multidisciplinary dialogue and inviting other entities\u2014real or spectral\u2014into her space. Her \u201cin vivo\u201d work dives into the essence of living interactions and communal narratives, true to the term\u2019s Latin roots of \u201cwithin the living.\u201d Here, Pinheiro embraces the unpredictable flow of life in public spaces\u2014beaches, markets, forests, streets, or squares\u2014employing an adaptable approach that harmonises with each environment and beckons unforeseen involvement from diverse participants.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Balvanera and Pinheiro echo Wynter\u2019s plot concept in different ways. As spaces of self-organisation, communal relationships, and ancestral cultural continuity, rural and urban spaces become sites of resistance and reclamation, akin to the plot. Their different practices reflect the plot\u2019s transformative potential: to create, within the enclosures of contemporary life, openings for new ways of seeing, relating, and being. Through this, they challenge dominant narratives and structures by crafting living, breathing spaces of artistic and communal resurgence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is much more to explore in <em>Plot(ting)<\/em>. To better understand what artists face when they act within a dominant order\u2014an order that produces them but that they resist and critique\u2014and to understand their work as both a cause and an effect of capitalist enclosures, however, one must first understand Wynter\u2019s conception of the plantation.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In what follows, I will focus on two facets of Wynter\u2019s framework of the plantation: the relational and the onto-epistemological. Considering the <em>relational <\/em>aspect of Wynter\u2019s work, I focus on the intertwined history of colonial domination and the exploitation of nature and human lives, drawing lines of connection between the plantation system, contemporary struggles, and art practices. In the <em>onto-epistemological dimension <\/em>of her work, Wynter illustrates how the plantation, both in its historical form and contemporary manifestations, is undergirded by a construction of Self that, through its production of (racialised) Others, deems some more exploitable than others and some more human than others. After outlining these two facets of Wynter\u2019s framework, I hone in on her reflections on the dialectical and ambiguous practices within the plantation\u2019s margins: the plots. I will then turn to the plot as a historical space, a form of decolonial and counter-hegemonic social relations and cultivation, an art practice, and a lens through which to engage with the contributions of this online platform.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:20px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Plantation: The First Factory&nbsp;<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In her work, Wynter weaves together the eras of slavery, colonialism, and the plantation economy with the extractive and exploitative logic of the relentless pursuit of accumulation in today\u2019s capitalist systems. For Wynter, understanding capitalism necessitates situating the plantation at its heart, before examining phenomena such as modes of production, class consciousness, wage labour, the dispossession of commons, commodification, railroads, steam engines, and so on. Wynter insists that the Black slave preceded the alienated wage worker of the Industrial Revolution.<sup data-fn=\"f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898\" id=\"f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898-link\">4<\/a><\/sup> Her teachings indicate how contemporary struggles\u2014encompassing issues such as poverty, gentrification, segregation, exploitation, and the suppression of radical movements\u2014are bound up with the historical enclosures of the plantation. The plantation\u2019s history, Wynter shows, reveals both the modes of social relations and the forms of domination that were then normalised throughout the world in different modalities.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The idea of race is integral to the function of the plantation and its progeny. The plantation system reduced enslaved people to property and \u201cextracted\u201d their labour, energy, and time.&nbsp;Without the idea of race, the plantation system would not have been possible. The plantation and all its offspring represent racial divisions and classifications that ultimately demarcate what and whose existence is privileged and what and whose existence is appropriated. It demarcates whose land, labour, and resources can be stolen and appropriated, and what bodies, kinships, languages, epistemes, cosmologies, and ecologies can be destroyed. Wynter argues that the histories of slavery and the justification of slavery by means of the invention of race are not only the basis of the plantation system but have been foundational to the organisation of capital and labour on a global scale.<sup data-fn=\"9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52\" id=\"9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52-link\">5<\/a><\/sup> The plantation needed the invention of racial difference to function.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In her work, Wynter insists that the onto-epistemological and ecological transformations that European colonialism and slavery set in motion date back to 1452, at the beginning of the so-called New World, when African slaves were put to work on the first plantations on the Portuguese island of Madeira. It is on the plantation where the ontological distinction between Man and Nature emerged, changing one\u2019s sense of being, knowing, and relating. It is on the plantation, according to Wynter, that \u201cthe process of the reduction of Man to Labour and of Nature to Land under the impulsion of the market economy\u201d began its course.<sup data-fn=\"1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9\" id=\"1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9-link\">6<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In her essay \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation\u2014An Argument,\u201d Wynter examines how this notion of Man continues to influence contemporary societal structures profoundly. As well as rendering non-white groups as inherently exploitable and subhuman, the humanistic epistemes Wynter examines form dominant narratives, ideologies, and worldviews of Western bourgeois humanism and its exclusionary understanding of what it means to be human.<sup data-fn=\"09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21\" id=\"09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21-link\">7<\/a><\/sup> The essay argues that the figure of \u201cMan\u201d is conflated with the onto-epistemological signification of whiteness, and that this conflation should be considered foundational for how power becomes operationalised and institutionalised. Wynter describes how the overrepresentation of Man in the history of Western humanism effectively marginalised \u201cnonwhite groups\u201d by relegating them to a subordinate position, thus outside of the category of the human.<sup data-fn=\"b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02\" id=\"b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02-link\">8<\/a><\/sup> Through this framework, the attributes of Man\u2014white, male, middle-class, European, heterosexual, tax-paying, able-bodied and so on\u2014are posited as the universal norm and representative of all humankind.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Engaging with Wynter\u2019s work, activists and scholars Stefano Harney and Fred Moten explain that Wynter\u2019s reading of the plantation system rests on the notion that the self is an autonomous proprietor of earth and land as resources to be exploited. They argue that this figure that they call the \u201cself-owning and earth-owning man\u201d relies on the construction of a specific figure of man: one who is part of a group that separates itself through invasion and enclosure, establishing divisions that determine ownership for some, while excluding others from ownership at all\u2014from either land or self.<sup data-fn=\"80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c\" id=\"80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c-link\">9<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Indigenous genocide and Black enslavement are prerequisites of the plantation system, which codes oppressed subjects into the system of colonial ownership by dispossessing them of their agency and of agency over nature\u2014and by excluding them from the category of &nbsp;the enslaved are coded in parallel with material extraction under the guise of exchange. \u2018Colonisation = thingification\u2019 . . . where subjectivity becomes fungible as a geographical as well as psychic and property entity.<sup data-fn=\"7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072\" id=\"7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072-link\">10<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At the foundation of the plantation system lies a reductionist ideology that treats certain bodies and land as exploitable property, as extractable matter. African people were robbed of their lands, displaced, and enslaved to produce commodities on lands that were themselves stolen through the genocide and dispossession of the Indigenous people of the Americas.<sup data-fn=\"157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7\" id=\"157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7-link\">11<\/a><\/sup> The category of Man has long afforded its proprietors ownership over people and nature. In this dominion, Man perceives himself as the \u201clord and possessor of Nature,\u201d subjecting enslaved individuals to dehumanisation, dispossession, and exploitation.<sup data-fn=\"f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485\" id=\"f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485-link\">12<\/a><\/sup> Simultaneously, plantations, driven by profit motives, obliterated local ecologies to create monocultures for the exchange market. Global capitalist societies continue to be \u201centirely structured around the production and circulation of commodities\u201d<sup data-fn=\"8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e\" id=\"8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e-link\">13<\/a><\/sup>; for Wynter, this means they continue to be structured around the plantation system. &nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter emphasises, \u201cThe later large-scale dehumanisation of the European proletariat, <em>followed&nbsp;on<\/em> and <em>did not precede<\/em> the total negation of the black as human.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222\" id=\"63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222-link\">14<\/a><\/sup> This is to say, the process of enclosure in Europe <em>followed<\/em> the discovery of the New World. For Wynter, the year 1452, at the beginning of the supposed New World, marks the inception of Man, whiteness, and capitalism. With this primacy given to the \u201cdiscovery\u201d of the New World, Wynter departs from and intervenes in the European Marxist tradition. The enclosure and the plantations were different expressions, in time and space, of the imperial logic.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In <em>Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body and Primitive Accumulation<\/em> (2004), scholar and feminist activist Silvia Federici describes the process of enclosure in Europe.<sup data-fn=\"3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675\" id=\"3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675-link\">15<\/a><\/sup> During the sixteenth century, straight lines and enclosures became a common feature of the Dutch and English agricultural landscape. Enclosures brought a specific form of agricultural production, a new power structure, and a logic of ownership and private property. Enclosure\u2014the fencing, appropriation, and expropriation of common land\u2014ended traditional rights to common land, transforming it from a space of communal use into one of private ownership. Modern divisions emerged, such as those between humanity and nature, capital and labour, and men and women. Furthermore, divisions arose between a class of larger-scale landowners who \u201cmodernised\u2019 and commercialised agricultural production and a group of people who had lost their communal lands and livelihoods to this new emerging capitalist class.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The impact of enclosure was far-reaching, influenced various aspects of life, and gave rise to capitalist structures becoming interwoven with a spatial principle. This novel approach to agricultural production, in which mechanisation stood as the principal means of accumulation, necessitated a distinct type of subject and subjectification aimed at propping up productivity. Within communities stripped of their land and resources, poverty became the impetus for waged labour. Communities of dispossessed peasants were made productive for and reliant upon waged labour. Scarcity forged the worker, serving as the host upon which the new capitalist class acted parasitically.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The enclosure and the plantation were different expressions of the same imperial logic. Wynter considers the plantation the metaphorical&nbsp; \u201cfirst factory,\u201d in that it shaped the early phases of capitalist production modes and became the nucleus of industrialisation. Moreover, the plantation was not merely a historical locus or event but is an ongoing \u201cdoing\u201d; it extends into the present. Plantation systems, Wynter argues&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>were both cause and effect of the emergence of the market economy; an emergence which marked a change of such world-historical magnitude, that we are all, without exception still \u2018enchanted,\u2019 imprisoned, deformed and schizophrenic in its bewitched reality.<sup data-fn=\"d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314\" id=\"d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314-link\">16<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Indeed, the essence of the plantation system lingers on, persisting in the form of global capitalist production systems that extract from and exploit nature, labour, bodies, time, lives, ecologies, and animals for profit. These systems sustain divisions and hierarchies that allocate privilege and appropriation over life\u2014in which race, gender, class, ability, and sexuality continue to be violently imposed. The plantation model continues operating through mechanisms of inclusion, exclusion, dominance, and ownership.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Consider the role of nation-states, detention centres, sweatshops, vacation resorts, gated communities, and prison complexes in this context. Additionally, the plantation system reinforces imposed poverty, policing, privatisation of the commons, wage disparities, and the quelling of movements for radical social change and justice. According to Wynter, cities are the \u201ccommercial expression\u201d of the plantation.<sup data-fn=\"a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58\" id=\"a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58-link\">17<\/a><\/sup> This expression includes the demolition of social housing; neglect of and cuts to public services and infrastructure; the curbing of informal economies; gentrification; home evictions; segregation; the housing market; criminalised inner-city men; the profiling of welfare mothers; the homeless; the sick, the old, and the tired; and also \u201cmigrants stranded outside the gates of the rich countries, as the postcolonial variant of [Frantz] Fanon\u2019s category of les damn\u00e9s.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f\" id=\"76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f-link\">18<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The plantation is a historical event, a production system, and a model for current economic, social, and geographical arrangements.<sup data-fn=\"3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55\" id=\"3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55-link\">19<\/a><\/sup> The notion of the self-owning and earth-owning man persists at the heart of European self-understanding.&nbsp;It is a function of the reproduction of capitalism, and it systematically excises the marginalised. It continues to reproduce divisions and classifications that demarcate whose existence is appropriated, exploited, and discarded.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cThe parallel here is that you cannot have a middle class as the norm of being human without the degradation of what is not the middle class,\u201d writes Wynter, \u201cwhich is the working class and the jobless.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc\" id=\"2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc-link\">20<\/a><\/sup> Today\u2019s capitalist enclosures, she writes,&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>with respect to race, class, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, struggles over the environment, global warming, severe climate change, the sharply unequal distribution of the earth\u2019s resources . . .&nbsp; are all differing facets of the central ethnoclass Man vs Human struggle.<sup data-fn=\"5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35\" id=\"5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35-link\">21<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter argues that understanding today\u2019s enclosures requires acknowledging their deep-rooted connection to Man\/whiteness that initially formed the plantation, and \u201cany attempt to unsettle the coloniality of power will call for the unsettling of this overrepresentation.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7\" id=\"ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7-link\">22<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The figure of Man and its onto-epistemological link to whiteness in Wynter\u2019s scholarship encapsulates how the complex relationships between slavery, race, extraction, exploitation, dehumanisation, and nature converge. Wynter\u2019s interdisciplinary approach incorporates literature, philosophy, and sociocultural theory to dismantle the constructs of the self-owning and earth-owning man, as established by the history of Western humanism. It shows that these constructs are historically and culturally contingent. Nothing is inevitable about this historical process; it could have been\u2014and should be\u2014otherwise.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>A central concern in Wynter\u2019s work is to read against the totalising hegemony of Europe\u2019s \u201cimplantation\u201d and to suggest instead that there was and has always been something else besides this dominant cultural logic.&nbsp;The plot is one instance of this something else.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:20px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Plot: Growing Yam in Unlikely Spaces<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What is one up against if they want to disrupt the ongoing plantation logic? What are the necessary conditions for change?&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In \u201cNovel and History, Plot and Plantation,\u201d Wynter draws a dialectical and ambiguous relation between two distinct but related geographical demarcations: the planter\u2019s plantation and the slave\u2019s provision grounds. In her words:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>The planters gave the slaves plots of land on which to grow food to feed themselves in order to maximise profits. We suggest that this plot system, was . . . the focus of resistance to the market system and market values. For African peasants transplanted to the plot all the structure of values that had been created by traditional societies of Africa, the land remained the Earth\u2014and the Earth was a goddess . . . Around the growing of yam, of food for survival, he created on the plot a folk culture\u2014the basis of a social order\u2014in three hundred years.<sup data-fn=\"0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3\" id=\"0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3-link\">23<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Plots were a vital space for sustenance, community, and cultural exchange. On these grounds, often at some distance from the plantation towns, the enslaved could grow their own food, socialise, and find a common language, providing a semblance of autonomy within the oppressive violence of the plantation system. The plots became essential for the survival of the enslaved, fostering a culture and knowledge system that operated within and apart from the plantation\u2019s brutality.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For Wynter, the subsistence farming of the plot system stands for the \u201csecretive histories\u201d of folk culture, regenerative agriculture, indigenous African knowledge, and resistance that existed alongside, under, and through the violent and extractive logic of the plantation.<sup data-fn=\"bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1\" id=\"bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1-link\">24<\/a><\/sup> Wynter writes that in these plots, a social order with its structure of values existed that did not make nature an object that man could appropriate and exploit. Here, \u201cthe land remained the Earth.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138\" id=\"321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138-link\">25<\/a><\/sup> Central to this plot system was the non-capitalist sensibility and non-property-centric logic of Africans, who viewed the land as synonymous with the Earth.<sup data-fn=\"a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a\" id=\"a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a-link\">26<\/a><\/sup> As temporary and fragile as these plots were, they allowed for ways of knowing, being together, and relating in a communal sense that was impossible on the plantation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter elucidates how these plots, while instrumental in the survival of the enslaved, did not exist in isolation from the violence of the plantation system. She is careful not to romanticise these plots; they were not free zones diametrical to the logic and violent ordering of the plantation. The plantation produced massive amounts of food but did not feed the enslaved. Slaves had to cultivate subsistence food on often mountainous and hardly fertile soil that held no value to the plantation\u2019s operations. Although often located out of sight of the plantation, plots were always under threat; as for the planters and overseers, these places were also suspect\u2014for who knew what the enslaved were \u201cplotting\u201d there.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Plots were thus subject to the plantation and a product of a violent colonial and capitalist order, but, at the same time, offering a potential refuge from it. It is not plot <em>versus<\/em> plantation, but plot-<em>and<\/em>-plantation: they implicate each other. Plot and plantation are at odds with each other but inhabit the same locus. This is to say, there is no outside; there is a within and against.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In <em>Black Metamorphosis,<\/em> Wynter describes this dialectical relation as follows:&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>[T]he earth was not regarded as property or land, but as the base of the community, the foundation of the common good, rather than a grab bag for private interest. . . . Such an ideology was directly opposed to the official plantation ideology, which saw both land and labor as forms of property. While the ideology of the masters stressed the rights of property, the worldview of the African slaves remained based on a man\u2019s relation to the earth and, concomitantly, to the community. This duality of worldviews, was at once complementary and antagonistic: two world views\u2014based on two different material bases\u2014yet two poles originating in the course of a single historical process.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0\" id=\"b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0-link\">27<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter\u2019s understanding of dialectics is essentially Leninist, based upon a splitting of the whole and a cognition of its contradictory parts. The intertwinement of these divergent ecological epistemes\u2014one rooted in community and equilibrium with nature, and the other rooted in private interests and extraction for profit\u2014reflects a complex interplay of complementary and antagonistic forces that are rooted in a single process.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This dialectical interplay of forces also affected the enslaved. The enslaved individual epitomised extreme alienation. Wynter metaphorically compares the slave to a silkworm, labouring for survival yet trapped in a cycle of exploitation. Wynter writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>As labour power on the plantation, [the slave] would represent the extreme case of alienation, producing an export mono-crop (sugar, cotton, vast areas of forest), dominating nature to create a product which was alien to his own needs, and which alienated him from them. As he created this product, it produced more capital, whose power over him was thus enforced. In his relation to the plantation, he was the silkworm who spun in order to continue his life as a caterpillar. On the plot, his position was a dual and dynamic relationship in which he adapted himself to Nature and also transformed Nature.<sup data-fn=\"e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013\" id=\"e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013-link\">28<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The slave\u2019s toil was detrimental to their needs and well-being but also entrenched them in the plantation\u2019s dominance.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Conversely, the semi-autonomous spaces of the plot allowed for a more dynamic engagement with the environment, where adaptation, transformation and a semblance of agency were, to an extent, possible. Out of the necessity for survival\u2014with and through extreme violence and deprivation\u2014comes counter-colonial environmental praxis. Wynter writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>The plot was the slave\u2019s area of escape from the plantation. It was an area of experience which reinvented and therefore perpetuated an alternative worldview, an alternative consciousness to that of the plantation. This world view was marginalised by the plantation but never destroyed. ln the relation to the plot, the slave lived in a society partly created as an adjunct to the market, partly as an end in itself.<sup data-fn=\"274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198\" id=\"274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198-link\">29<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The plot is both the cause and the effect of the plantation system. It exists in and is a product of a world dominated by market relations, and it is a locus of resistance to and critique of the market system and market values. This is the foundational ambivalence: both a necessity and a possibility, \u201cat once the root cause of our alienation; and the possibility of our salvation.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf\" id=\"c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf-link\">30<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The plot punctures the order of exchange value, inserting into the interstices of the plantation a logic that is antagonistic to it; yet, it develops within the context of racist, capitalist systems.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Wynter\u2019s account of the plot shows how the social ordering of life is braided around the question of what it means to be human: the answer, she argues, is contained both within the colonial figure of \u201cMan\u201d and in the absolute refusal to accept this as the sole answer. Wynter calls for forging alternative social relations, other subjectivities, and different inhabitations that potentially unsettle the enclosures epitomised by Man.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Wynter\u2019s work, the plot becomes a metaphor for enacting a worldview rooted in a communal relationship with the earth, highlighting themes of coexistence, cooperation, and communal kinship, opposed to yet enmeshed in the individualistic, property-centric logic of the plantation. Through the lens of the plot, Wynter not only critiques the historical and ongoing processes of marginalisation and exploitation but also foregrounds the enduring power of collective agency in seeking, crafting, and excavating spaces of difference, liberation, and self-determination. The plot excavates time and space for what is considered impossible under those systems: the narratives and cultural practices that foster alternative values to those offered by the prevailing order.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The cultivation of yam subtly but poignantly illustrates this dialectical ambiguity of the plot. Wynter refers to the plot as \u201cthe roots of culture\u201d and mentions one food product of this alternative space: yam.<sup data-fn=\"81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b\" id=\"81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b-link\">31<\/a><\/sup> Africans could maintain agricultural traditions with crops they often secretly imported across the Middle Passage, such as yams, ackee, gourds, and other staples. The yam, a tuberous root vegetable, was a preferred food of Africans and their descendants. In fact, it was so important to the provision grounds they were sometimes called yam grounds.<sup data-fn=\"dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287\" id=\"dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287-link\">32<\/a><\/sup> In Wynter\u2019s work, the yam also symbolises \u201csecretive histories,\u201d the \u201cvalues of the under life,\u201d and the subterranean subversiveness of the plot.<sup data-fn=\"6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593\" id=\"6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593-link\">33<\/a><\/sup> As author Elizabeth DeLoughrey explains:&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>[The] yam\u2019s location in the provision grounds outside of the plantation complex (often out of view), as well as its subsistence underground (where it collects nutrients for the community), underlines its significance as an invisible resource, one that must be physically and imaginatively sought, cultivated, and excavated in terms of both time and space.<sup data-fn=\"6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3\" id=\"6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3-link\">34<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Cultivating yams in hardly fertile grounds emphasises the resilience and regeneration of culture, language, and values through, as writer Nalo Hopkinson says, \u201cgrowing things. Chop them up, and, like yams, they just sprout whole new plants. To re-member is to reassemble the limbs of a story, to make it whole again.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf\" id=\"41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf-link\">35<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The plot unsettles the story of the self-owning and earth-owning man; inside the ostensibly totalising orders of the plantation, plot-living is going on. \u201cThe slave plot, on which the slave grew food for his\/her subsistence, carried over a millennially other conception of the human to that of Man\u2019s,\u201d writes Wynter. \u201cSo that plot exists as a threat. It speaks to other possibilities.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072\" id=\"dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072-link\">36<\/a><\/sup> For Wynter, the plot is both a space of difference and an alternative cosmogony through which other ways of being human are exercised.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:20px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Plot(ting): From Yam to Jazz to Stories to Art Practices<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While inextricably entwined with capitalist logic, how can art practices carve out different ways of knowing and relating as it\u2019s being exploited by such a prevailing logic?&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, Wynter shows how the supposedly unproductive and hardly fertile grounds of the plots transformed into a Black cultural \u201cunder life.\u201d Yams fed into jazz: \u201cWork songs, spirituals, blues, and jazz,\u201d writes Wyner, \u201cwere the counter-poetics native and indigenous to the American continent, subterraneanly subversive of its surface reality.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f\" id=\"2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f-link\">37<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Similarly, in \u201cHistory and Novel, Plot and Plantation,\u201d Wynter describes how the people transplanted to the plantations and the novel form were both the creators <em>and<\/em> products of an emerging exchange market. She writes that the form of the novel and plantation societies are \u201ctwin children of the same parents.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615\" id=\"6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615-link\">38<\/a><\/sup> The novel form, like the slave\u2019s plot, is both a critique and product of the market economy. The novel was a product of an emerging market structure yet offered room for alternative ideas, different values, and stories that were distinct from those of the market system in which it circulated as a commodity. The plot and the novel provide \u201ca focus of criticism against the impossible reality in which [they were] enmeshed.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198\" id=\"bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198-link\">39<\/a><\/sup> In the novel and the plot, resistance found a breeding ground. The novel here represents the inherent ambiguity of the entanglement with the plantation, suggesting other minor and temporary possibilities. The enclosures one inhabits are not fully enclosed.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Post-abolition, the values and expressions of Black cultural under-life of the Middle Passage, as Wynter calls it, would further \u201cfind [their] counterparts in many non-normative movements, in the Women\u2019s, students, Youth, and Hippies.\u201d Wynter suggests that \u201c[i]f Utopia is to be realised, it must first be represented and imaginatively constituted.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec\" id=\"bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec-link\">40<\/a><\/sup>&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Here, Wynter gives the example of communities who, through participation and interaction, read against the rigid patterns of domination by making music, dancing, rebelling together, and finding a common language. These are communities that found ways to experiment with and express their shared desire to read the world differently and cultivate different modes of relation and co-habitation. Connecting the plot-and-plantation to music, radical social movements, and literature, amongst other things, underscores the depth of the plot-and-plantation concept and its continuing relevance to artistic practice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Amidst historical constraints and current hurdles, one might wonder where to start and how to engage in plotting without it being merely symbolic or, worse, being instrumentalised to serve undesired political ends. Wynter underscores the importance of new narratives, pointing out that the grand narratives of liberal humanism have led people to their current predicament. It is within someone\u2019s power to shape the narratives that define their existence: \u201cThe human is not only a languaging being but also a storytelling species. In my own terms, the human is <em>homo narrans<\/em>,\u201d Wynter argues.<sup data-fn=\"7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923\" id=\"7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923-link\">41<\/a><\/sup> \u201cStories make place,\u201d asserts academic and author Katherine McKittrick, highlighting how narratives envision and shape \u201cnew geographies of liberation.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4\" id=\"f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4-link\">42<\/a><\/sup> Like the arts, McKittrick suggests, stories spark curiosity, collaboration, speculation, and fabulation, and foster relationality and conversation.<sup data-fn=\"3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca\" id=\"3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca-link\">43<\/a><\/sup> Stories\u2014and, I would add, art practices\u2014that create places \u201ctell the world differently, with creative precision,\u201d inviting people to think, feel, and respond.<sup data-fn=\"93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775\" id=\"93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775-link\">44<\/a><\/sup> According to McKittrick, the stories that create spaces encompass a range of expressions, including theory, dance, poetry, sound, music, geography, emotion, photography, painting, and sculpture.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Plot(ting) <\/em>probes the potential for plot work as an artistic praxis.<sup data-fn=\"dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3\" id=\"dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3-link\">45<\/a><\/sup> The platform is attuned to practices that carve out realms of interaction that transcend dominant capitalist logics, embodying a form of plot work in their own right. The contributions to <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> reflect the capacity of artistic practice and research to emulate the plot\u2019s transformative potential, fostering new modalities of connection that challenge the overrepresentation of the ethnoclass of the self-owing and earth-owning man. <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> embraces diverse methods of establishing connections and relationships, ways of living and being, and creating places and practices characterised by ambivalence, difference, contradiction, and complexity. &nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And yet, as I\u2019ve written <a href=\"https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/blog\/publication\/plot-work-as-an-artistic-praxis-in-todays-cityscapes\/\" data-type=\"link\" data-id=\"https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/blog\/publication\/plot-work-as-an-artistic-praxis-in-todays-cityscapes\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">elsewhere<\/a>,<sup data-fn=\"481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642\" id=\"481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642-link\">46<\/a><\/sup> plotting as an artistic practice should not become another of those \u201coptimistic fantasies.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3\" id=\"21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3-link\">47<\/a><\/sup> Plot work \u201cis not a practice whereby shiny, happy artists sing \u2018Kumbaya!\u2019 and make art in blissful co-existence under the radar of the slow collapse of social and ecological structures.\u201d <sup data-fn=\"abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a\" id=\"abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a-link\">48<\/a><\/sup>Plotting emerges from the unravelling of \u201cupward mobility, job security, political and social equality.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730\" id=\"2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730-link\">49<\/a><\/sup> It aligns with scholar and artist Ashton T. Crawley\u2019s notion of \u201cthe nevertheless and in spite of condition\u201d: the idea that despite feeling restricted and confined, there exists \u201can excessive force that sustains.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01\" id=\"d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01-link\">50<\/a><\/sup> The terms \u201cnevertheless\u201d and \u201cin spite of\u201d highlight \u201cthe always available and plural otherwise possibility.\u201d<sup data-fn=\"e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9\" id=\"e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9-link\">51<\/a><\/sup> However, engaging in plot work carries no promises. It is inherently fragile, vulnerable, and frequently without desired outcomes\u2014endeavours falter and situations change. Artists who plot always risk remaining, to use Wynter\u2019s term, a silkworm. A plot remains perpetually \u201cin the works,\u201d simultaneously coming together and coming undone.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The dynamics of plot-and-plantation are indeed inseparable, and the <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> platform is intricately woven into the fabric of a market-driven system. The concept of plot-and-plantation urges us to maintain a connection between <em>Plot(ting) <\/em>and its production processes, including the circumstances under which it is produced. The context in which <em>Plot(ting) <\/em>is produced, Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Amsterdam, is characterised by a predominantly white faculty and student body and has been impacted by market forces and prolonged reductions in funding. <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> emerges partly from an institutionalised and state-supported environment alongside conditions marked by involuntary flexibility, job insecurity, limited resources, and temporary contracts. Contributors to this publication often balance multiple roles within the gig economy to sustain themselves. This publication, too, is a product and critique of the field in which it is enmeshed.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By serving as a research project and platform in this context, <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> showcases works that aim to transcend the conventional settings of galleries, public spaces, fairs, or art exhibitions. It is dedicated to presenting practices that recognise and value what has always already existed. <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> embraces not just the tangible objects, pieces, or performances, but also practices and processes that work in unconventional spaces and settings. <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> gathers practices in which other values are acted upon, constituted, and grounded in space\u2014practices that interlace the material and the metaphoric show how art is ensnared in market logic and are a reminder of the existence of other possibilities. Significantly, <em>Plot(ting)<\/em> eschews a singular focus. The contributions refrain from delivering clear-cut narratives or solutions but catalyse curiosity and hint at diverse ways of living otherwise. They call for communality, remembering, recuperation, collaboration, resistance, rebellion, and co-existence, and the form of theory, dance, murmur, work songs, cooking, mud, literature, and personal archives, among others. Together, these bundled forces reclaim the things that have long been repressed or deemed irrational or savage, such as spirituality, community knowledge, land knowledge, the body, sexuality, and ghosts.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>Plot(ting)<\/em> hopes to be a reminder that, however fringe, ephemeral, and marginal, there is a right life in the wrong one. After all, as Wynter reminds us, \u201chuman beings are magical\u201d . . . at least sometimes.<sup data-fn=\"ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec\" class=\"fn\"><a href=\"#ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec\" id=\"ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec-link\">52<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-footnotes\"><li id=\"be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7\">Paul \u00c9luard, <em>Oeuvres completes. Vol. 1<\/em> (Paris: Galliamard, 1968), 986. <a href=\"#be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 1\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8\">Sylvia Wynter, \u201cThe Pope Must Have Been Drunk, the King of the Castile a Madman: Culture as Actuality, and the Caribbean Rethinking Modernity,\u201d in <em>The Reordering of Culture: Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada in the Hood<\/em>, Alvina Ruprecht and Cecilia Taiana, eds. (Carleton: Carleton University Press, 1995), 35. <a href=\"#b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 2\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98\">See Sylvia Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World<\/em>, 133, unpublished manuscript, no date, housed in The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York, <a href=\"https:\/\/monoskop.org\/images\/6\/69\/Wynter_Sylvia_Black_Metamorphosis_New_Natives_in_a_New_World_1970s.pdf\">https:\/\/monoskop.org\/images\/6\/69\/Wynter_Sylvia_Black_Metamorphosis_New_Natives_in_a_New_World_1970s.pdf<\/a>. <a href=\"#0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 3\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898\">Ibid. <a href=\"#f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 4\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52\">Ibid. <a href=\"#9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 5\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9\">Sylvia Wynter, \u201cNovel and History, Plot and Plantation,\u201d <em>Savacou<\/em> 5 (June 1971), 99. <a href=\"#1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 6\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21\">The capitalised \u201cWestern\u201d here refers to a specific form of post-Enlightenment humanism that Wynter addresses and critiques in her work. Importantly, it does not refer to a region, but rather to a nexus of knowledge and power, a specific idea of what knowledge is and the power with which this limited idea is imposed in many different contexts. <a href=\"#09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 7\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02\">Sylvia Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation\u2014An Argument,\u201d <em>CR: The New Centennial Review<\/em> 3, no. 3, (Fall 2003), 288. <a href=\"#b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 8\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c\">Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, <em>All Incomplete<\/em> (New York: Minor Compositions, 2021), 27. <a href=\"#80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 9\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072\">Kathryn Yusoff, <em>A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None<\/em> (Minneapolis, MN: University Of Minnesota Press, 2019), 32. <a href=\"#7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 10\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7\">Vicky Osterweil, <em>In Defense of Looting: A Riotous History of Uncivil Action<\/em> (New York, Bold Type Books, 2020): 16. <a href=\"#157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 11\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485\">Descartes cited in Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d \u00a099. <a href=\"#f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 12\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e\">Osterweil, <em>In Defense of Looting<\/em>, 15. <a href=\"#8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 13\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222\">Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 45\u201346. Italics mine. <a href=\"#63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 14\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675\">Silvia Federici, <em>Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body and Primitive Accumulation<\/em> (New York: Autonomedia, 2004). <a href=\"#3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 15\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314\">Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 89. <a href=\"#d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 16\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58\">Ibid., 102. <a href=\"#a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 17\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f\">Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom,\u201d 261. <a href=\"#76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 18\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55\">Katherine McKittrick, \u201cPlantation Futures,\u201d <em>Small Axe<\/em> 17, no. 3, (November 2013), 12. <a href=\"#3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 19\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc\">Wynter quoted in David Scott, \u201cThe Re-enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter,\u201d <em>Small Axe<\/em> 8 (September 2000), 136. <a href=\"#2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 20\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35\">Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom,\u201d 260. <a href=\"#5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 21\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7\">Ibid. <a href=\"#ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 22\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3\">Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 99. <a href=\"#0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 23\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1\">Ibid., 101. <a href=\"#bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 24\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138\">Ibid., 99. <a href=\"#321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 25\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a\">Elizabeth DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot: Allegories of the Provision Grounds,\u201d<em> Small Axe<\/em> 34 (March 2011), 60. <a href=\"#a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 26\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0\">Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 48. <a href=\"#b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 27\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013\">Ibid., 52. <a href=\"#e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 28\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198\">Ibid. <a href=\"#274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 29\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf\">Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 99. <a href=\"#c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 30\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b\">Ibid. <a href=\"#81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 31\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287\">DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 60. <a href=\"#dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 32\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593\">Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 515. <a href=\"#6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 33\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3\">DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 60. <a href=\"#6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 34\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf\">Nalo Hopkinson quoted in DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 62. <a href=\"#41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 35\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072\">Wynter quoted in Scott, \u201cThe Re-enchantment of Humanism.\u201d <a href=\"#dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 36\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f\">Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 218. <a href=\"#2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 37\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615\">Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 97. <a href=\"#6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 38\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198\">Ibid., 98. <a href=\"#bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 39\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec\">Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 918. <a href=\"#bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 40\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923\">Sylvia Wynter, <em>Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis,<\/em> ed. Katherine McKittrick (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2015), 25. <a href=\"#7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 41\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4\">Katherine McKittrick, <em>Dear Science and Other Stories<\/em> (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2021), 9. <a href=\"#f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 42\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca\">McKittrick, <em>Dear Science and Other Stories<\/em>, 51. <a href=\"#3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 43\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775\">Ibid., 9. <a href=\"#93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 44\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3\">Patricia de Vries, \u201cPlot Work as an Artistic Praxis in Today\u2019s Cityscapes,\u201d <em>Institute of Network Cultures<\/em>, <a href=\"https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/09\/Plot-Work_INC2023_Miscellanea.pdf\">https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/09\/Plot-Work_INC2023_Miscellanea.pdf<\/a>. <a href=\"#dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 45\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642\">Ibid. <a href=\"#481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 46\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3\">Lauren Berlant, <em>Cruel Optimism<\/em> (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011). <a href=\"#21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 47\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a\">De Vries, \u201cPlot Work as an Artistic Praxis in Today\u2019s Cityscapes,\u201d 15. <a href=\"#abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 48\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730\">Berlant, <em>Cruel Optimism<\/em>, 3. <a href=\"#2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 49\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01\">Ashton T. Crawley, <em>Blackpentecostal Breath: the Aesthetics of Possibility<\/em> (New York: Fordham University Press, 2016), 8. <a href=\"#d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 50\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9\">Ibid., 82. <a href=\"#e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 51\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><li id=\"ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec\">Wynter, <em>On Being Human as Praxis<\/em>, 1. <a href=\"#ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec-link\" aria-label=\"Jump to footnote reference 52\">\u21a9\ufe0e<\/a><\/li><\/ol>\n\n\n<div style=\"height:3px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer bio-divider\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Patricia de Vries<\/strong> is a research professor of Art &amp; Spatial Praxis at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie. Art &amp; Spatial Praxis is a research group focusing on art, activist, and academic practices that intervene in capitalist enclosures\u00a0such as cities, urban developments, institutes, and infrastructures. In my work, I explore the plot as a model for practice on a broad scale, exploring how artists, writers, and scholars can defy institutional and capitalist norms to cultivate different forms of understanding, existence, and social relations.\u00a0I previously worked as an assistant professor of philosophy at Maastricht University\u00a0and as a researcher at the Institute of Network Cultures in Amsterdam.\u00a0I received my doctorate from Erasmus University in Rotterdam.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>There is another world, but it is inside this one.\u2014Paul \u00c9luard Human beings are magical. Bios and Logos. Words made flesh, muscle and bone animated by hope and desire, belief materialized in deeds, deeds which crystallize our actualities. . . . And the maps of spring always have to be redrawn again, in undared forms.\u2014Sylvia [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"single_special.php","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":"[{\"content\":\"Paul \u00c9luard, <em>Oeuvres completes. Vol. 1<\/em> (Paris: Galliamard, 1968), 986.\",\"id\":\"be074a48-f5cb-4227-8d87-a6fd437d08b7\"},{\"content\":\"Sylvia Wynter, \u201cThe Pope Must Have Been Drunk, the King of the Castile a Madman: Culture as Actuality, and the Caribbean Rethinking Modernity,\u201d in <em>The Reordering of Culture: Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada in the Hood<\/em>, Alvina Ruprecht and Cecilia Taiana, eds. (Carleton: Carleton University Press, 1995), 35.\",\"id\":\"b8833032-1ff7-43c8-a9ab-74ad45d2dfe8\"},{\"content\":\"See Sylvia Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis: New Natives in a New World<\/em>, 133, unpublished manuscript, no date, housed in The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York, <a href=\\\"https:\/\/monoskop.org\/images\/6\/69\/Wynter_Sylvia_Black_Metamorphosis_New_Natives_in_a_New_World_1970s.pdf\\\">https:\/\/monoskop.org\/images\/6\/69\/Wynter_Sylvia_Black_Metamorphosis_New_Natives_in_a_New_World_1970s.pdf<\/a>.\",\"id\":\"0af2ad57-01d1-4a24-b191-ed922b6a1e98\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"f8414885-f687-4c70-9abb-cdb8dd2e8898\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"9059f38c-4c6c-4783-9b03-ca1e4b04cd52\"},{\"content\":\"Sylvia Wynter, \u201cNovel and History, Plot and Plantation,\u201d <em>Savacou<\/em> 5 (June 1971), 99.\",\"id\":\"1aa7f561-6e6f-4b5e-8f42-680ed457ede9\"},{\"content\":\"The capitalised \u201cWestern\u201d here refers to a specific form of post-Enlightenment humanism that Wynter addresses and critiques in her work. Importantly, it does not refer to a region, but rather to a nexus of knowledge and power, a specific idea of what knowledge is and the power with which this limited idea is imposed in many different contexts.\",\"id\":\"09347b00-89a5-4756-b6c9-0d4067038c21\"},{\"content\":\"Sylvia Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation\u2014An Argument,\u201d <em>CR: The New Centennial Review<\/em> 3, no. 3, (Fall 2003), 288.\",\"id\":\"b52a8087-cc02-4155-a406-705bffe12c02\"},{\"content\":\"Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, <em>All Incomplete<\/em> (New York: Minor Compositions, 2021), 27.\",\"id\":\"80f68b17-11d1-4516-b2c1-9e753c5b3c1c\"},{\"content\":\"Kathryn Yusoff, <em>A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None<\/em> (Minneapolis, MN: University Of Minnesota Press, 2019), 32.\",\"id\":\"7707ccb0-bfc9-47a0-b26a-dcc6a2d83072\"},{\"content\":\"Vicky Osterweil, <em>In Defense of Looting: A Riotous History of Uncivil Action<\/em> (New York, Bold Type Books, 2020): 16.\",\"id\":\"157fbd2e-568e-4755-a043-0e57a551c4f7\"},{\"content\":\"Descartes cited in Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d \u00a099.\",\"id\":\"f3a2f3a0-b84e-41e4-a437-b3d87ead9485\"},{\"content\":\"Osterweil, <em>In Defense of Looting<\/em>, 15.\",\"id\":\"8955b1b6-b483-48a0-b375-b1602d1f884e\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 45\u201346. Italics mine.\",\"id\":\"63ec5770-62b2-4ac1-87f5-241f345a5222\"},{\"content\":\"Silvia Federici, <em>Caliban and the Witch: Women, The Body and Primitive Accumulation<\/em> (New York: Autonomedia, 2004).\",\"id\":\"3e66ab31-ae0e-492a-a663-5cd3e409a675\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 89.\",\"id\":\"d0d93e75-0edb-4856-af36-439150f97314\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 102.\",\"id\":\"a7bee53f-0a09-4cc1-9396-3ee41fb02a58\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom,\u201d 261.\",\"id\":\"76699f3b-4e6f-4fcc-acc4-714939d83a2f\"},{\"content\":\"Katherine McKittrick, \u201cPlantation Futures,\u201d <em>Small Axe<\/em> 17, no. 3, (November 2013), 12.\",\"id\":\"3ab35436-f4b2-4518-b82d-29fc89d6cb55\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter quoted in David Scott, \u201cThe Re-enchantment of Humanism: An Interview with Sylvia Wynter,\u201d <em>Small Axe<\/em> 8 (September 2000), 136.\",\"id\":\"2a354b9c-999e-47b8-8eb1-0449cfd3d3dc\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cUnsettling the Coloniality of Being\/Power\/Truth\/Freedom,\u201d 260.\",\"id\":\"5a31e14a-b5a1-4eb7-9697-e5b6d5410c35\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"ce0ff16a-55eb-47d7-8121-cf13a62637c7\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 99.\",\"id\":\"0a133f5b-0d64-42a1-a143-0f6a0b961df3\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 101.\",\"id\":\"bee7b841-99de-4609-a847-fad5962084f1\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 99.\",\"id\":\"321d2eca-e21d-45b1-8934-5d48028ea138\"},{\"content\":\"Elizabeth DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot: Allegories of the Provision Grounds,\u201d<em> Small Axe<\/em> 34 (March 2011), 60.\",\"id\":\"a961d4b0-3011-4423-95b2-a004b993395a\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 48.\",\"id\":\"b73ea071-bb23-42f7-9dfc-00b48f12a7f0\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 52.\",\"id\":\"e3efa31e-280f-4ec8-9dc2-720ca90c3013\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"274b3958-5ac3-4820-9e82-843d0c64c198\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 99.\",\"id\":\"c1ae765c-7f0a-4bc3-bdba-d034586cdabf\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"81de3668-d11b-45ed-8698-3330e4d39a9b\"},{\"content\":\"DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 60.\",\"id\":\"dfc725d9-f2c7-4679-b913-96adcf6a0287\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 515.\",\"id\":\"6fb75e81-2f8a-4d19-be18-7b00c052a593\"},{\"content\":\"DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 60.\",\"id\":\"6cdf8062-9abe-4390-9ef3-4bc7999a49e3\"},{\"content\":\"Nalo Hopkinson quoted in DeLoughrey, \u201cYam, Roots, and Rot,\u201d 62.\",\"id\":\"41a60ae5-caa3-47b0-9fdc-d0072295cfbf\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter quoted in Scott, \u201cThe Re-enchantment of Humanism.\u201d\",\"id\":\"dc37e51b-3250-41a0-8464-7689cdc74072\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 218.\",\"id\":\"2d18bc3e-9c6b-4cea-b788-16e9c65caf5f\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, \u201cNovel and History,\u201d 97.\",\"id\":\"6dfff9ad-8513-4e43-82c3-238b8c81d615\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 98.\",\"id\":\"bb1f2ce5-ad02-4710-ab2d-52e1140aa198\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>Black Metamorphosis<\/em>, 918.\",\"id\":\"bbdac43e-e8b9-4517-a5cb-8ac44d2f65ec\"},{\"content\":\"Sylvia Wynter, <em>Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis,<\/em> ed. Katherine McKittrick (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2015), 25.\",\"id\":\"7814d363-9b6a-4568-a116-bcce41cf8923\"},{\"content\":\"Katherine McKittrick, <em>Dear Science and Other Stories<\/em> (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2021), 9.\",\"id\":\"f827be79-0c90-4545-b66a-68e2b750c6d4\"},{\"content\":\"McKittrick, <em>Dear Science and Other Stories<\/em>, 51.\",\"id\":\"3fbdb6eb-3f16-42bc-b498-72d3962c30ca\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 9.\",\"id\":\"93f7372c-1ca5-4690-bc3e-85e653170775\"},{\"content\":\"Patricia de Vries, \u201cPlot Work as an Artistic Praxis in Today\u2019s Cityscapes,\u201d <em>Institute of Network Cultures<\/em>, <a href=\\\"https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/09\/Plot-Work_INC2023_Miscellanea.pdf\\\">https:\/\/networkcultures.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/09\/Plot-Work_INC2023_Miscellanea.pdf<\/a>.\",\"id\":\"dd7ad024-89fb-472b-9e80-0991e40a1cc3\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid.\",\"id\":\"481cf22c-cb35-467a-a174-ff88a872f642\"},{\"content\":\"Lauren Berlant, <em>Cruel Optimism<\/em> (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011).\",\"id\":\"21a32192-76ed-48b8-aa7d-699be03152f3\"},{\"content\":\"De Vries, \u201cPlot Work as an Artistic Praxis in Today\u2019s Cityscapes,\u201d 15.\",\"id\":\"abc8f0e4-60d2-41cc-9554-bd582f65d43a\"},{\"content\":\"Berlant, <em>Cruel Optimism<\/em>, 3.\",\"id\":\"2206aa68-c313-4caf-b5c2-f1d9ec827730\"},{\"content\":\"Ashton T. Crawley, <em>Blackpentecostal Breath: the Aesthetics of Possibility<\/em> (New York: Fordham University Press, 2016), 8.\",\"id\":\"d48f435c-c2d9-41ce-9f8e-b5a9859a9e01\"},{\"content\":\"Ibid., 82.\",\"id\":\"e65a04ea-4295-458d-a155-d686da8200f9\"},{\"content\":\"Wynter, <em>On Being Human as Praxis<\/em>, 1.\",\"id\":\"ee24cdb7-fde2-4691-9bbd-d1eb6753c1ec\"}]"},"categories":[1,3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-454","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-all-groups","category-text"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/454","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=454"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/454\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1224,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/454\/revisions\/1224"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=454"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=454"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/plotting.rietveldsandberg.nl\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=454"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}