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*Call for contributors to Critical Animal Geographies edited volume*

Fifteen years after the publication of the groundbreaking *Animal
Geographies* (Wolch & Emel 1998), followed by *Animal Spaces, Beastly Places
* (Philo & Wilbert 2000), a growing number of geographers now readily
acknowledge the nonhuman animal as an important site of intellectual
inquiry. Following the call to “bring the animals back in” to the
discipline (Wolch & Emel 1995), animal geographers have taken up the
project of “decentering the human in human geography” (Anderson 2013) by
reckoning with the inescapable contingency of the human subject. This has
yielded fascinating and important explorations of deeply constitutive
human-animal relations and the spaces, traces, violences and practices that
enable them and are left in their wake.

Since the “third wave” of animal geographies (Urbanik 2012) in the 1990s,
billions of real animals have continued to service humans and capitalist
accumulation as food, labourers, entertainment, clothing, biomedical
research subjects, and companions. Human-animal relationships are fraught
with complex dynamics of power and privilege involving the uneven
appropriation of lives, labours and bodies across species, including
humans. At the same time, humans and animals have an extraordinary capacity
for engaging in inter-species relationships of mutual care, love, and
companionship. These ambivalent material-semiotic entanglements between
humans and animals are both at stake and implicated in contemporary
ecological crises, bringing a critical urgency to the task of rethinking
dominant orders (capitalist, species, juridico-political, scientific) that
structure human-animal relations.

As geographers, we have just scratched the surface of academic inquiry into
the rich and varied lives of animals, the ethical and political questions
relating to human-animal relations, and the implications for thinking about
alternative modes of being in this multispecies world. Critical human
geography has traditionally aimed not merely to interpret and analyze the
world, but to change it. In such a spirit, this edited volume makes a call
for a distinct critical animal geography – one that interprets the complex
plurality of human-animal relations, but does not stop there. Critical
animal geographies interrogate structures of power and social inequality
across species lines and presuppose a commitment to understanding and
destabilizing the status quo and reimagining alternative visions of
human-animal relations.

The aim of this edited volume is to feature cutting edge critical animal
geographies research that radically rethinks how we conceptualize our
relationship and responsibility to nonhuman animals. We are interested in
empirical and theoretical engagements rooted in critical geographic
research relating to animals and human-animal relations. We are also
interested in fresh perspectives on methodological approach and on
extending critical and radical theoretical framings to include animal
geographies work. Chapters may include (but are not limited to) engagement
with feminist/eco-feminist, political economy, post-humanist,
cyborg/hybrid, anarchist, post-colonial, and queer literatures in order to
envision a diverse set of epistemological, ontological and methodological
perspectives on animals.

We ask that anyone interested in contributing to this Critical Animal
Geographies volume submit a one page CV (including previous publications)
and an abstract of no more than 500 words by June 1, 2013. If your abstract
is selected for inclusion in the book, full chapters will be due February
1, 2014.

Please send abstracts and direct any questions to the volume editors: Katie
Gillespie ([email protected]) and Rosemary-Claire Collard (
[email protected]).

*References*:

Anderson, Kay. 2013. “Mind over Matter? On Decentering the Human in Human
Geography,”
Annual Cultural Geographies Lecture, Annual Meeting of the Association of
American Geographers, April 12.

Philo, Chris & Chris Wilbert. 2000. *Animal Spaces, Beastly Places*.
Routledge.

Urbanik, Julie. 2012. *Placing Animals*. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

Wolch, Jennifer & Jody Emel. 1998. *Animal Geographies*. London: Verso.

Wolch, Jennifer & Jody Emel. 1995. Guest-edited issue: Bringing the animals
back in.
*Environment & Planning D: Society and Space*, 13(6).

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