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Atacama Desert's solastalgia: color and water for dumping
De Jaegher, C.S. (2024). Atacama Desert's solastalgia: color and water for dumping. Biosemiotics Online First: 26. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12304-023-09551-w
In: Biosemiotics. Springer: Dordrecht. ISSN 1875-1342; e-ISSN 1875-1350, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    Atacama; Aral Sea; clothing; dump; techno-body dumping; biocultural semiocide; solastalgia

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  • De Jaegher, C.S., more

Abstract
    The blooming desert or 'El desierto florido' in Spanish, is a millenarian climate pattern caused by El Nino that warms the surface waters in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean and creates the conditions for rain in the Altiplano and the Atacama Desert, north of Chile. After some millimeters of abundant rain, a rich biotic community emerges, and in a matter of hours or days, the driest surface on Earth becomes an impressive colorful habitat for more than two hundred different species of eye-catching flowers that host the desert biotic life.Unfortunately, this breathtaking display of colors coexists with less appealing but equally astonishing landscapes. The Atacama Desert harbors the largest accumulation of discarded clothing worldwide and the largest pools of lithium mining which require vast amounts of water for their production. Every year, approximately 56,000 tons of used clothing, predominantly consisting of fast fashion polyester products, water-intensive cotton fabrics, and equally polluting material scraps, are deposited, forming toxic mountains of waste.This article presents an interpretation of these distinct landscapes as interconnected realities of the dump that illustrate the impact of biocultural semiocides, whereby the loss of relationships and meanings with Earth materials is shaped by glocal forces. By making this argument, the article contends that the Atacama region replicates the conditions of the Earth as a global dumping and solastalgia, namely 'the pain caused by the loss of solace and the sense of desolation connected to one ' s home and territory.'

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