BP Oil Spill Threatens Future of Indigenous Communities in Louisiana
Democracy Now
During our recent trip to southern Louisiana, we visited Grand Bayou, a village accessible only by boat, that feels they are on the brink of extinction. The indigenous Atakapa-Ishak people in this coastal Louisiana village have relied on the land and water around them to survive for generations. They live mostly off the oysters, shrimp and fish they draw from the marshes. Now the traditions and very survival of this small community are at risk. We went to Grand Bayou on the same day as a visiting delegation from Alaska who survived the Exxon-Valdez spill and spoke to indigenous leaders from both disaster-affected communities
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[How do we develop] ways of perceiving therelationships between and among people, our pasts, our pasts’ legacies, our present lives and struggles, our environments, disciplines, and texts. (24)--Johnnella E. Butler, “Reflections on Borderlands and the Color Line.” (2000) "All the languages of heteroglossia ... are specific points of view on the world, forms for conceptualizing the worldinwords, specific worldviews, each characterized by its own objects, meanings, and values.--Bakhtin
Monday, July 12, 2010
Democracy Now: BP Oil Spill Threatens Future of Indigenous Communities in Louisiana
Labels:
Alaska,
Atakapa-Ishak,
BP,
Community,
Corporations,
Exxon,
Exxon-Valdez Spill,
Grand Bayou,
Gulf Coast,
Indigenous,
Louisiana,
Oil
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