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"Wild Capitalism" and "Ecocolonialism": A Tale of Two Rivers
Authors:KRISTA HARPER
Affiliation:Department of Anthropology and the Center for Public Policy and Administration, University of Massachusetts–Amherst, Amherst, MA 01002
Abstract:The development and pollution of two rivers, the Danube and Tisza, have been the site and subject of environmental protests and projects in Hungary since the late 1980s. Protests against the damming of the Danube rallied opposition to the state socialist government, drawing on discourses of national sovereignty and international environmentalism. The Tisza suffered a major environmental disaster in 2000, when a globally financed gold mine in Romania spilled thousands of tons of cyanide and other heavy metals into the river, sending a plume of pollution downriver into neighboring countries. In this article, I examine the symbolic ecologies that emerged in the two moments of environmental protest, as well as Hungarian activists' reflections on the changing political ecology of the region in their discourses of "ecocolonialism" ( ökógyarmatosítás ) and "wild capitalism" ( vadkapitaliszmus ).
Keywords:environment    national identity    political discourse    Eastern Europe    Hungary
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