• Abundance in the Anthropocene

    Author(s):
    Eleanor Hadley Kershaw, Eva Haifa Giraud (see profile) , Richard Helliwell, Greg Hollin
    Date:
    2019
    Subject(s):
    Animals--Study and teaching, Ethics, Science--Study and teaching, Sociology
    Item Type:
    Article
    Tag(s):
    abundance, animal, inequalities, Animal studies, Anthropocene, Environmental humanities, Science studies
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/fzm8-kr40
    Abstract:
    Numerous attempts have been made to understand the Anthropocene in relation to overwhelming species and habitat loss. However, amidst these losses ecological niches have emerged and been taken as signs of resilience and hope: from mushrooms that flourish in damaged forests to urban wildlife in brownfield sites. This article offers an alternative conception of abundance, which addresses the sociological and conceptual challenges posed when abundance is a characteristic of so-called pests, parasites and pathogens. The article draws together research from three case studies: bed bugs, hookworms and antibiotic resistant microbes, all of which have become intimately entangled with particular human communities as other lifeforms have declined. Through contrasting these cases we elucidate how the affordances of abundant lifeforms, including the dangers they pose to other forms of life, are entwined with failed ‘technofixes’, colonial legacies and contemporary inequalities. In doing so we situate abundance as a constitutive element of the Anthropocene that requires as sustained an ethical engagement as questions of species loss. We conclude by arguing that further ethical attention needs to be paid to finding ways of ‘being alongside’ life that is difficult to live with, but is becoming intimately re-entangled with human worlds. In doing so, we complicate existing theoretical work that has drawn hope from multispecies abundance and entanglement.
    Notes:
    Part of Sociological Review collection/monograph, edited by Joanna Latimer and Daniel Lopez Gomez
    Metadata:
    Published as:
    Journal article    
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    4 years ago
    License:
    All Rights Reserved
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