Un-Natural Discourse in the Age of Anthropogenic Landscapes

How We Imagine Wildlife

Barbara Jones author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:15th Feb '25

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Un-Natural Discourse in the Age of Anthropogenic Landscapes cover

This book argues how by relying on unnatural discourse to relate to the natural world, coexistence becomes much more difficult to achieve.

Our relationship with wildlife and wild spaces is moving away from one of dominion over nature to one that strives for coexistence; yet this coexistence is typically fragmented and with many wildlife species relies on tautologies that reinforce unnatural and culturally defined metaphors and stories that keep us outside of nature. To assist in identifying common ground amidst competing users of our shared landscapes, Un-Natural Discourse in the Age of Anthropogenic Landscapes: How We Imagine Wildlife considers how the language we use can challenge our ability to coexist with wild nature. When we say a bison is livestock we diminish its wildness, while a beaver as a pest marginalizes it to exist outside of our Anthropogenic landscapes or to not exist at all. By calling the woodland caribou the gray ghost we have made it invisible so when it disappeared from the lower forty-eight United States, its absence was hardly acknowledged. Anti-predator hype defines the gray wolf as vermin and the federally protected grizzly as ferocious or as a conflict bear to maintain and encourage a low social tolerance for those species. Since language forms meaning, Barbara Jones argues how by relying on unnatural discourse to relate to the natural world, coexistence becomes much more difficult to achieve.

“Language is too often an overlooked point of leverage in wildlife struggles. In “Un-natural Discourse” Barbara shows how terms like “invasive” or “nuisance wildlife” can preclude conversation. In contrast, she notes, advocates actively reclaiming the narrative with terms like “ecosystem services” and “restoration” can effectively reshape the outcome as well.” -- Heidi Perryman, Ph.D.
Today’s wildlife face unprecedented challenges as humanity changes the way, where, and how they can live at ever faster rates. Barbara Jones's Un-natural Discourse in the Age of Anthropogenic Landscapes: How We Imagine Wildlife offers fact-based stories of these wildlife difficulties and sometimes not so happy endings to reveal their causes, how our human dominance perspective is changing and the chance for a mutual way forward for all living things. -- Gregg Servheen, Retired Wildlife Biologist and Natural Resource Manager
Jones skillfully combines multi-sited ethnography with a history of past and current perspectives on human-wildlife interactions in her call to reimagine how we perceive human relationships with wildlife and their ecosystems before it is too late. Un-Natural Discourse will prove prescient for how future human societies will merge with the lives of their non-human neighbors. -- Anthony Balzano, Sussex County Community College

ISBN: 9781666914801

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

232 pages