Apologies for any cross-postings.
From: DAWN BIEHLER <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: Discussion list for Feminism in Geography <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: CFP: Urban animal geographies
Date: Sat, 30 Aug 2003 07:28:34 -0600
Call for Papers: Urban Animals
2004 Association for American Geographers Meetings
14-19 March Philadelphia, PA
Organizers:
Dawn Biehler, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Jennifer Blecha, University of Minnesota
Recent work in animal geographies has sought to account for the place of
non-humans in the social and natural order. The purpose of these sessions
is to engage this scholarship with an examination of the social, cultural,
and political meanings of urban animals, as well as their material aspects.
We plan to organize two related paper sessions, one focusing primarily on
pets and the other on urban livestock.
Regarding pets: The intimate relationships between humans and animal pets in
cities, and the ways these animals participate in the fabric of urban life,
may add new dimensions to geographers’ understandings of urban theory, the
urban environment, and the body. Social categories including but not
limited to race, class, gender, age, and ability mark relationships with
domestic animals in the city, and vice versa. Furthermore, pets take part
in broader urban conditions of poverty and wealth, order and chaos, and
ecology. This session seeks papers that address human practices with
companion animals, from the feral to the fierce to the lavishly pampered, in
cities worldwide. Papers may address the role of urban pets in human social
difference, nature-society relations, construction of place, health, urban
development, or other urban issues.
Regarding urban livestock: In spite of imagery to the contrary, livestock
animals are a significant presence in many cities around the world. In many
cities of the South, urban livestock provide significant proportions of city
residents’ milk, egg and meat consumption. In the North, livestock animals
in large numbers were ubiquitous in cities up into the 20th century. Even
now, a significant number of urban dwellers keep these animals for food,
tradition or enjoyment. This session seeks papers on urban livestock past
and present, in the South and North, kept for subsistence or hobby. Papers
may address legal and land-use issues, human-animal relationships, cultural
conflicts, notions of urban and rural, developmentalism and community
organizing, or other issues around urban livestock raising, practices,
slaughter, consumption, rights, or agency.
Please contact Dawn ([log in to unmask]) or Jennifer
([log in to unmask]) with questions or interest. Please submit abstracts by
September 20th.
****
Karen Dias
PhD Student
University of Minnesota
[log in to unmask]
Co-editor, thirdspace
http://www.thirdspace.ca
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