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Bio-Geo-Graphy: Landscape, Dwelling, and the Political Ecology of Human-Elephant Relations

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Abstract

The relation between the bio and the geo has been amongst geography's most enduring concerns. This paper contributes to ongoing attempts in human geography to politicise the dynamics and distribution of life. Drawing upon postcolonial environmental history, animal ecology, and more-than-human geography, the paper examines how humans and elephants cohabit with and against the grain of cartographic design. Through fieldwork in northeast India, it develops a ‘dwelt political ecology’ that reanimates landscape as a dwelt achievement whilst remaining sensitive to postcolonial histories and subaltern concerns. The paper conceptualises and deploys a methodology of ‘tracking’ through which archival material, elephant ecology, and voices of the marginalised can be integrated and mapped. It concludes by discussing the implications of this work for fostering new conversations between more-than-human geography and subaltern political ecology.

Description

Keywords

more-than-human geography, political ecology, Asian elephant, landscape, subaltern studies, bio-geo-graphy, cultural geography, postcolonial

Journal Title

Environment and Planning D: Society and Space

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0263-7758
1472-3433

Volume Title

32

Publisher

SAGE Publications