This essay looks to decolonise the technological history of the greenhouse through arts research. My decolonial research approach is rooted in the forms and forces, the geoaesthetics that shape my life and upbringing on the colony that still is my home-island of Puerto Rico, as part of the broader Caribbean milieu and diaspora. Over time, from that life and research, an intuition emerged, one that led me to sense how the greenhouse strongly represents man’s misleading delusion of mastery over, and disconnection from nature. It is from that intuition and ensuing research that I set-forth the following hypothesis: if the greenhouse metaphor embodies the dissociative, colonial reflex driving global warming, then the invention of the greenhouse must be one of the beginnings to the geological timeline of the Anthropocene.
Full title of the essay: The golden spike is not the nuclear bomb: propædeutic to the paramannerist treatise.