Siirry päänavigointiin Siirry hakuun Siirry pääsisältöön

The Hedgehog from Jordan: or, how to locate the movement of wild animals in a partially Mediterranean context

Tutkimustuotos: Artikkeli kirjassa/raportissa/konferenssijulkaisussaKirjan luku tai artikkeliTieteellinenvertaisarvioitu

Abstrakti

This chapter considers Mediterranean crosslocations in terms of nonhuman animals. It begins with a hedgehog crossing the border between Jordan and Israel, and describes some of the ways it has been spatially located. One involves formal scientific classification systems: Latin naming conventions, concepts of habitat and ideas about indigeneity. The hedgehog’s designated habitat overlaps with another locating system in the region, the state border territorial structure, which is not at all relevant to hedgehogs. A third layer is to consider how the hedgehog might fit into the idea of Mediterranean, to which the short answer is: awkwardly. The chapter then moves away from hedgehogs to briefly describe how people in different parts of the geographical Mediterranean have accounted for the dramatic rise in populations of wild boar in their area in recent years. Wild boar are among a number of animals that have suddenly appeared, or rapidly increased in number, in many areas in the geographical Mediterranean region. Looking at how people have accounted for this provides one way to briefly explore how the logic of locating regimes might be deployed to explain changes in the spatial presence of non-human animals.
Alkuperäiskielienglanti
OtsikkoLocating the Mediterranean : Connections and Separations across Time and Space
ToimittajatCarl Rommel, Joseph Viscomi
Sivumäärä22
JulkaisupaikkaHelsinki
KustantajaHelsinki University Press
Julkaisupäivä7 heinäk. 2022
Sivut199-221
ISBN (painettu)978-952-369-076-9
ISBN (elektroninen)978-952-369-078-3, 978-952-369-077-6
DOI - pysyväislinkit
TilaJulkaistu - 7 heinäk. 2022
OKM-julkaisutyyppiA3 Kirjan tai muun kokoomateoksen osa

Tieteenalat

  • 5143 Sosiaali- ja kulttuuriantropologia

Siteeraa tätä