What is it about?

The landscape of the tropics is being viewed from a fresh lens. In 2016 the United Nations declared 29 June the ‘International Day of the Tropics’ – a day dedicated to celebrating and raising awareness of the tropical regions of the world. The date is the anniversary of the launch of the inaugural State of the Tropics 2014 report by Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the first major output of the State of the Tropics project which draws on the expertise of leading tropical institutions from around the world. The ‘International Day of the Tropics’ testifies to the growing awareness of the significance of the tropics for the entire globe. This global dynamic calls for new engagements with and within the tropics. In the past, the tropics has been largely defined by the views of outsiders as the region captured the imagination of ancient philosophers and colonial explorers, of artists and scientists. During the inauguration for the ‘International Day of the Tropics’, a ‘tropics lens’ for assessing how knowledge and ideas benefiting the tropical region was proposed. This new lens requires the views of creative and innovative scholars: of critical and indigenous thinkers, explorers of the imagination, new media artists, of social scientists and colleagues in cognate disciplines.

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Why is it important?

A ‘tropics lens’ for assessing how knowledge and ideas benefiting the tropical region is needed. This new lens requires the views of creative and innovative scholars: of critical and indigenous thinkers, explorers of the imagination, new media artists, of social scientists and colleagues in cognate disciplines.

Perspectives

Views of 'the tropics' are problematically intertwined with old philosophical views of the torrid zone and colonial perspectives of the global south. There is a need for a 'tropical' lens from the perspectives of people of the tropics and from creative and innovative scholars.

Associate Professor Anita Lundberg
James Cook University

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This page is a summary of: Introduction: A Tropical Lens, eTropic electronic journal of studies in the tropics, December 2016, James Cook University,
DOI: 10.25120/etropic.15.2.2016.3537.
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