Messing with methods in mud with pigs and mangroves
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Messing with methods in mud with pigs and mangroves |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Judith, Kate (Author) and Ahlberger Le Dunff, Helene (Author) |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Program Abstracts: 4S Sydney: TRANSnational STS: Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference 2018 |
Number of Pages | 1 |
Year | 2018 |
Place of Publication | Sydney, Australia |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | https://convention2.allacademic.com/one/ssss/4s18/ |
Conference/Event | 4S Sydney: TRANSnational STS: Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference 2018 |
Event Details | 4S Sydney: TRANSnational STS: Society for Social Studies of Science Annual Conference 2018 Event Date 29 Aug 2018 to end of 01 Sep 2018 Event Location Sydney, Australia |
Abstract | Thinking mud is something many humans are not well practiced in, but it is something mangroves and pigs can do well. We are making ‘theory in the mud’ (Haraway 2016) through allowing the practices of mangroves and pigs to guide us into the the shifting, the multiple, the earthly, the sticky, the dirty and the dangerous. Understanding pigs’ practice of wallowing in mud, and the accumulation and settling in mud of mangroves as grounded ways of being, lets us see these more-than-human worlds as sticky webs of encounters. Our studies take an interest in the muddy world making of pigs and mangroves as they rub against those human desires which locate cleanness, control and identity in opposition to muddiness. The mangroves of Sydney are negotiating their world making around the margins not only of the harbour and rivers of the city but also of the human imaginings of these spaces. In the capital of Kiribati, pigs’ mud weaves together modern and traditional waterworlds. In lurking with the mangroves of Sydney and the pigs of Kiribati we notice their accommodating, edge-seeking, space-shaping methods. Much of this adaptive and experimental practice incorporates quantities of discharges, toxins, and human practices. We have made particular choices about the tools, practices, theories and words we use to engage and think with our non-human collaborators. We find there hosts, guests, parasites, kin, co-producers and co-participants. In this paper we will share our own methodological journeys in engaging theoretical perspectives within mangrove and pig worlds. |
Keywords | mud, mangrove, method, more-than-human, agency |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 500304. Environmental philosophy |
440699. Human geography not elsewhere classified | |
Public Notes | Abstract only published, |
Byline Affiliations | University of New South Wales |
University of Sydney | |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q4yw7/messing-with-methods-in-mud-with-pigs-and-mangroves
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