Unsettling responsibility: Postcolonial interventions
Publication date
2012
Authors
Noxolo, P.
Raghuram, P.
Madge, C.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
This paper contributes to debates about geographies of responsibility. In contrast to
much of the previous literature in this field, which has concentrated on teasing out the
intimate interconnections between different people, places and spaces, in this paper we
highlight the limits to such connections, focusing on more unsettled versions of responsibility.
Our critique draws on postcolonial readings to highlight two limitations of
responsibility: its availability as an ethical gesture that can be ascribed even where it is
not practised; and its imputed agency that makes it possible for responsible agency to
be usurped by the global North. This starts to muddy the water of responsibility, showing
how it may involve refusal, denial, withdrawal and contamination. More problematised
enigmatic and risky versions of responsibility arise from these critiques. In
particular, we argue that in considering responsibility as practice, a recognition of the
provisional, contaminated and complex myriad of power relations involved may signal
a move towards more ambivalent versions and visions that acknowledge the vulnerabilities
and disconnections involved in geographies of responsibility.
Keywords
responsibility, postcolonialism, power, practice, disconnection, unsettling