I'm developing this memo based on a reading of Sam Spiegel's 2021 article Fossil fuel violence and visual practices on Indigenous land: Watching, witnessing and resisting settler-colonial injustices. The article extends from ethnographic research around environmental activism against two pipeline projects on indigeneous lands in British Columba, CA: 1) Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion (TMX), carrying heavy oil (bitumen) and 2) Coastal Gaslink pipeline, carrying fracked gas. The article provides a framework to study the visual practices and tactices enaged in by the state, fossil fuel companies, and environmental defenders. The author also selects and discusses 12 visuals that focus particularly on visual practices and images of fossil fuel opposition, including photos, posters, and artworks, such as courtroom drawings. Notably, the analysis is organized around different periods of the anti-pipeline struggles (before the research, in response to police raids, and COVID-19 pandemic).
Spiegel distinguishes between the petro-state’s visual tactics and counter-hegemonic visual practices:
A) Petro-state visual tactics:
B) Counter-hegemonic visuality