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Encountering Moose in a Changing Landscape: Sociality, Intentionality, and Emplaced Relationships

Westman, Clinton N. ; Joly, Tara L. ; Pospisil, H. Max ; Wheatley, Katherine

Ethnos, 2022-10, Vol.87 (5), p.932-962 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Stockholm: Routledge

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  • Título:
    Encountering Moose in a Changing Landscape: Sociality, Intentionality, and Emplaced Relationships
  • Autor: Westman, Clinton N. ; Joly, Tara L. ; Pospisil, H. Max ; Wheatley, Katherine
  • Assuntos: Cree ; Cree people ; domusw ; human-animal relations ; Humans ; Hunting ; Indigenous peoples ; Intention ; Intentionality ; Moose ; Métis ; Organizational research ; Theory of mind
  • É parte de: Ethnos, 2022-10, Vol.87 (5), p.932-962
  • Descrição: Drawing on research among Cree and Métis hunters, we consider how moose enter into situated relationships with humans, other beings, and one another. Moose engage in communicative acts exhibiting embodied intentionality and a relational theory of mind. Moose intentionalities and subjectivities are partly knowable to hunters through the co-constructed perceptual lens that develops as moose and humans make homes together in a shared landscape - a 'domus' as David Anderson puts it. Moose reward humans who deeply engage with them, sharing knowledge of moose life/death projects, intraspecies connections, and localised environments - in the hunting context and sometimes in other contexts as well. Moose and those who hunt them attempt to approach, engage, outwit, and beguile one another. In documenting both this contact zone and aspects of moose interiority and perception (umwelt), we contribute more-than-human knowledges from Indigenous people of northern Canada to theories of mutualistic relationships, entanglement, and emplacement.
  • Editor: Stockholm: Routledge
  • Idioma: Inglês;Francês;Alemão;Sueco

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