ABSTRACT

Tasmania’s forests have been the site of a decades-long conflict. Popularly, politically, and provocatively termed the ‘forestry wars,’ the question of competing sides – jobs versus the environment – often dominates this dispute. Tasmanians, and others engaged in similar conflicts throughout the world, require a new language of conflict – one that takes seriously the transformative nature of human–nonhuman relationships. Drawing on Ezzy’s (2004) response to Emmanuel Levinas’s concept of ‘the face,’ in Chapter 28 of the Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity, Banham argues for recognition of a form of ecocultural identity the author terms empathetic positionality. Empathetic positionality refers to ways an individual’s position in the Tasmanian forest conflict is informed by their perception of forestry practices as violent acts committed against the forest other – an other to whom one has an ethical obligation. The chapter offers an alternative view of the conflict, arguing that concerns about forestry often are predicated upon relationally informed perceptions of violent practices rather than political opposition to the existence of a forestry industry per se. Empathetic positionality is an articulation of identity complexities beyond opposing sides or incompatibilities, and instead envisages new ways forward that propose a reimagining of conflicts. Banham explores the interaction between power dynamics and emotional responses (such as grief) to forestry practices, advocating for respect of the forest as a participant in discussions of its own fate. Through a recognition of empathetic positionality, the author calls for a reshaping of dominant conversations underpinning conflicts over extractive industries, not only in Tasmania but internationally.