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This timely book provides a methodological guide for how to conduct and theorize research in human-animal studies. In response to critiques of the anthropomorphic slant to human-animal research, and the increasing political relevance of animals in contemporary environmental debates.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Hidden in plain sight: how (and why) to attend to the animal in human-animal relations
PART I THEORISING
Chapter 2: Decentring humans in research methods: visibilising other animal realities
Chapter 3: Understanding human-animal relations from the perspective of work
Chapter 4: Re-thinking animal and human personhood: towards co-created narratives of affective, embodied, emplaced becomings of human and nonhuman life
PART II: COLLABORATING
Chapter 5: Two species ethnography: honey bees as a case study of an interdisciplinary "more-than-human" method
Chapter 6: Trekking a predator’s journey: paths through the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Chapter 7: How to do multispecies-ethnographies when exploring human-(wild) animal interactions: affect, multisensory communication and materiality
PART III: VISUALISING
Chapter 8: Shared sensory signs: mine detection rats and their handlers in Cambodia
Chapter 9: Doing multispecies ethnography with mobile video: exploring human-animal contact zones
Chapter 10: Getting visceral: body mapping the humanimalian
About the author
Annalisa Colombino holds a PhD in human geography from the Open University. She now works at Ca’ Foscari, University of Venice, Italy. Her research applies cultural geography to topics such as place-marketing, commodification and branding processes, the geographies of consumption, the bioeconomy and the diverse economy. Most recently, she has been working at the intersection of economic geography, animal geographies and the geographies of food adopting a more-than-human approach inspired by biopolitical thought. Her interdisciplinary research is published in Italian, English and German.
Heide K. Bruckner is a researcher and lecturer currently working in the Department of Geography at the University of Graz, Austria. In her scholarship, she focuses on the promises and challenges of "alternative" food systems in the Global North and South. In particular, she is drawn to embodied, visceral geographies that capture the intersection of personal experience and more-than-human political ecologies. Her diverse research projects span the globe, from the United States and Latin America, to western Europe and the South Pacific.
Summary
This timely book provides a methodological guide for how to conduct and theorize research in human-animal studies. In response to critiques of the anthropomorphic slant to human-animal research, and the increasing political relevance of animals in contemporary environmental debates.