Cultural Geography
180 CULTURENATURES regards the materialization approach adopted by Braun and Butler to be essentially neo-Kantian: for all its c ...
5 Note that in this chapter I am interested less in ‘nature’ and ‘culture’ as ideas having a material exis- tence – though this ...
182 CULTURENATURES Dickens, P. (1996) Reconstructing Nature. London: Routledge. Doel, M. (2000) Postructural Geographies. Edinbu ...
Timparano, S. (1975) On Materialism. London: New Left. Vogel, S. (1996) Against Nature. Buffalo: State Univer- sity of New York. ...
They are first and foremost themselves, despite the many meanings we dis- cover in them. We may move them around and impose our ...
REANIMATING CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY 185 of geographical inquiry as the study of ‘areal differentiation’, requiring attention to uniqu ...
domestication and biological control’ (Cansdale, 1950; 1951a; 1951b; 1951c; 1951d; see also Cansdale, 1952). Even earlier, Eagle ...
(though this had less appeal in Europe: Harris, 1996: 442; Simmons, 1980: 150) and a focus on material culture. Later British ge ...
ethology, landscape ecology and conservation biology), as well as the ‘new’ environmental history, collided with social theoreti ...
they are ‘charismatic’ and/or protected under worldwide conventions? If animals are inherently linked to place-making and place- ...
and used according to particular, legitimized codes. As the ‘empire comes home’ in the form of international migration to the we ...
Wolf representations emphasized so-called savagery, lack of mercy, unfair habits of pack hunting, and cowardice – all contraveni ...
view, he articulates a political geography of dog-stealing characterized by class antagonisms and exploitation of rich by poor, ...
of urbanization into their habitats. This strategy is fraught with difficulties, including lack of sufficient scientific knowled ...
geography emphasized symbolic qualities of landscape and avoided the morphology and metaphors of natural agency characteristic o ...
forage, etc.). Globalization of livestock production has led to widespread rural decline, however, resulting in the disappearanc ...
196 CULTURENATURES subverted regulations. Gaynor (1999: 13) argued that productive animal exclusion constituted an ideological a ...
might create not only physical places for animals in the city, but also political space for social movements intent on peace bet ...
198 CULTURENATURES management sciences, the lives of individual animals per sewere not a consideration, nor was their subjectivi ...
perceived abundance of kangaroos eliminated them from ethical consideration by conservation- ists who place value only on the ra ...
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