Final published version
Licence: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - Sharing the Field
T2 - Reflections of More-Than-Human Field/work Encounters
AU - Marr, Natalie
AU - Lantto, Mirjami
AU - Larsen, Maia
AU - Judith, Kate
AU - Brice, Sage
AU - Phoenix, Jessica
AU - Oliver, Catherine
AU - Mason, Olivia
AU - Thomas, Sarah
PY - 2022/7/31
Y1 - 2022/7/31
N2 - The “field” has long been contested as spatially and temporally bounded. Feminist epistemologies have re-imagined and engaged field/work as shared, messy and co-constitutive, while critical more-than-human methodologies in the transdisciplinary field of the environmental humanities are further expanding our understanding of who and what counts in the production of knowledge in the field. This compendium article orbits around a collective concern for the sharedness of bodily and planetary ecologies through field/work. It brings together cross-disciplinary accounts of field encounters that critically explore what it feels like to do this work and what it entails. With a focus on practice and process, the six contributing authors—researchers, artists, practitioners, writers—consider how nonhumans share in our research, shaping the work we do, the questions we ask and the responses we craft. Together, they offer thoughtful provocations on the troubling and promising ways in which human and non-human bodies become unsettled and rearranged through field encounters.
AB - The “field” has long been contested as spatially and temporally bounded. Feminist epistemologies have re-imagined and engaged field/work as shared, messy and co-constitutive, while critical more-than-human methodologies in the transdisciplinary field of the environmental humanities are further expanding our understanding of who and what counts in the production of knowledge in the field. This compendium article orbits around a collective concern for the sharedness of bodily and planetary ecologies through field/work. It brings together cross-disciplinary accounts of field encounters that critically explore what it feels like to do this work and what it entails. With a focus on practice and process, the six contributing authors—researchers, artists, practitioners, writers—consider how nonhumans share in our research, shaping the work we do, the questions we ask and the responses we craft. Together, they offer thoughtful provocations on the troubling and promising ways in which human and non-human bodies become unsettled and rearranged through field encounters.
KW - encounter
KW - feminist epistemologies
KW - fieldwork
KW - knowledge practices
KW - multispecies relations
U2 - 10.1080/2373566x.2021.2016467
DO - 10.1080/2373566x.2021.2016467
M3 - Journal article
VL - 8
SP - 555
EP - 585
JO - GeoHumanities
JF - GeoHumanities
SN - 2373-566X
IS - 2
ER -