Produktbild: Decolonizing Extinction

Decolonizing Extinction The Work of Care in Orangutan Rehabilitation

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.08.2018

Abbildungen

7 illustrations

Verlag

Duke University Press

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15/1,8 cm

Gewicht

522 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8223-7062-8

Beschreibung

Rezension

"This is seriously thought-provoking and challenging material, and it may be essential to understand it if we want to save orangutans from ourselves." - John R. Platt (The Revelator) "Impactful. . . . Juno S. ParreÑas details diverse assumptions and expectations participants bring to this complex network, thereby generating a unique and timely addition to the conservation literature. Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty and professionals." - L. K. Sheeran (Choice) "Decolonizing Extinction is essential reading for anyone with the ambition to do multispecies ethnography well. It's also a beautiful and moving book that struggles with the ethical weight of ethnography as a mode of knowledge production." - Gabriel N. Rosenberg (Radical History Review) "[This book] excels in these tricky in-between places: in meetings between species, between temporalities, between bodies, between genders, between sexes, and across divergent positions within colonial histories and presents. ParreÑas tracks meetings across difference with the best kind of ethnographic sensitivity." - Rosemary Collard (Society & Space) "Decolonizing Extinction offers a compelling example of why feminism is well suited and positioned to take on issues related to animals, as well as how gender relations of power are necessarily embedded in human-animal relations, and in turn broader process of colonization and arrested autonomy." - Alice Hovorka (Society & Space) "The book brilliantly weaves discussions about broader socio-political transformations and norms alongside very careful and detailed accounts of the everyday practices and interactions between orangutans and people." - Krithika Srinivasan (Society & Space) "A powerful, thought-provoking, and touching account of the quotidian nature of mass extinction." - Becky Mansfield (Society & Space) "ParreÑas's Decolonizing Extinction is a beautifully written book, in which she uses a case study of orangutan rehabilitation on Borneo to weave together many complex analytic threads: gender, race, and labor; care, violence, and freedom; liberalism and neoliberalism; the geological past, the colonial present, and the prospect of a different future." - Rebecca Lave (Society & Space) "With Decolonizing Extinction, Juno Salazar ParreÑas gives us a groundbreaking and beautifully written multispecies ethnography that explores the entwined lives of human and nonhuman primates. Deftly combining primatology, political ecology, and postcolonial and feminist theory, her book will interest biological and cultural anthropologists alike and has the potential to foster deeper cross-disciplinary engagement." - Genese Marie Sodikoff (American Ethnologist)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.08.2018

Abbildungen

7 illustrations

Verlag

Duke University Press

Seitenzahl

288

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15/1,8 cm

Gewicht

522 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8223-7062-8

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Decolonizing Extinction
  • Acknowledgments  ix
    Introduction: Decolonizing Extinction  1
    Part I. Relations
    1. From Ape Motherhood to Tough Love  33
    2. On the Surface of Skin and Earth  61
    Part II. Enclosures
    3. Forced Copulation for Conservation  83
    4. Finding a Living  105
    Part III. Futures
    5. Arrested Autonomy  131
    6. Hospice for a Dying Species  157
    Conclusion: Living and Dying Together  177
    Notes  189
    References  223
    Index  255