Authors:
Stéphanie Eileen Domptail, Jennifer Hirsch, Ernst-August Nuppenau
Entry type:
Year of publication:
2023
Tags:
In Western Europe, farmers are embedded in a secular culture, characterized by a worldview where (hu)mans and nature are separated and opposed, capitalism rules exchanges, nature is rationally exploited, and the process of food production was long ignored. This worldview is hegemon and questioned as colonizing. Agroecological approaches and practices are said to enable farmers to entertain fundamentally different relationships with nature through their agricultural activities. Such a decolonized relationship to nature requires that farmers act based on an alternative worldview, holistic and inclusive of people and nature. Yet, we currently have little cultural information about agroecological farmers in Western Europe. We analyse narratives of four farmers to explore and document their worldviews, especially how farmers conceptualize their connection with nature. We ask how the worldview of agroecological farmers in Germany makes use of a decolonized perspective in order to reconstruct their relations to nature. Results show that both colonized and decolonized perspectives of nature co-exist but rather in the form of a struggle between worlds. Our analysis provides evidence of current cultural traits of agroecological farmers in central Germany and reveals fundamental ontological challenges in fostering the agroecological transition.