The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene

Landscapes are sites of struggle for many ways of being, human and nonhuman. This paper draws attention to weedy landscapes as places for anthropologists to get to know the Anthropocene, in all its heterogeneity. Weeds are creatures of human disturbance, and the forms they take depend on the kind of...

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Main Author: Anna Tsing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society) 2017-06-01
Series:Suomen Antropologi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/65084/26231
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spelling doaj-d536cec5c60e46cb9728e1eb441e24c92020-11-24T22:02:44ZengSuomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)Suomen Antropologi1799-89721799-89722017-06-01421321The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the AnthropoceneAnna Tsing0University of California, Santa Cruz Landscapes are sites of struggle for many ways of being, human and nonhuman. This paper draws attention to weedy landscapes as places for anthropologists to get to know the Anthropocene, in all its heterogeneity. Weeds are creatures of human disturbance, and the forms they take depend on the kind of disturbance and the kind of unmanagement that follows. Weeds guide us to coordinations between human and nonhuman projects of world making—as exemplified, in this paper, by ‘the dream of the stag,’ an axis linking the imaginations of red deer and hunters, who are both opportunistic interlopers in the research site. The research concerns the weedy ‘auto-rewilding’ of a former brown coal mine in the sandy glacial outwash of central Jutland, Denmark. Previously an anthropogenic moorland used mainly for grazing sheep, labor-intensive mining emerged during World War II but was abandoned in 1970, leaving sand piles and holes that became acidic lakes. Beginning in 2013, Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene (AURA) began an experiment in fieldwork there that crosses natural science/social science boundaries, and this paper emerges from that continuing encounter. The dream of the stag draws the analysis into the political ecology of weedy emergence, which in turn opens reflections on more-than-human world-making and the possibility of thinking Anthropocene timelines through weeds.https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/65084/26231Anthropocenelandscapeweedsred deer imaginariespost-mining ecologiesauto-rewildingHeidegger
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Tsing
spellingShingle Anna Tsing
The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
Suomen Antropologi
Anthropocene
landscape
weeds
red deer imaginaries
post-mining ecologies
auto-rewilding
Heidegger
author_facet Anna Tsing
author_sort Anna Tsing
title The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
title_short The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
title_full The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
title_fullStr The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
title_full_unstemmed The Buck, the Bull, and the Dream of the Stag: Some unexpected weeds of the Anthropocene
title_sort buck, the bull, and the dream of the stag: some unexpected weeds of the anthropocene
publisher Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)
series Suomen Antropologi
issn 1799-8972
1799-8972
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Landscapes are sites of struggle for many ways of being, human and nonhuman. This paper draws attention to weedy landscapes as places for anthropologists to get to know the Anthropocene, in all its heterogeneity. Weeds are creatures of human disturbance, and the forms they take depend on the kind of disturbance and the kind of unmanagement that follows. Weeds guide us to coordinations between human and nonhuman projects of world making—as exemplified, in this paper, by ‘the dream of the stag,’ an axis linking the imaginations of red deer and hunters, who are both opportunistic interlopers in the research site. The research concerns the weedy ‘auto-rewilding’ of a former brown coal mine in the sandy glacial outwash of central Jutland, Denmark. Previously an anthropogenic moorland used mainly for grazing sheep, labor-intensive mining emerged during World War II but was abandoned in 1970, leaving sand piles and holes that became acidic lakes. Beginning in 2013, Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene (AURA) began an experiment in fieldwork there that crosses natural science/social science boundaries, and this paper emerges from that continuing encounter. The dream of the stag draws the analysis into the political ecology of weedy emergence, which in turn opens reflections on more-than-human world-making and the possibility of thinking Anthropocene timelines through weeds.
topic Anthropocene
landscape
weeds
red deer imaginaries
post-mining ecologies
auto-rewilding
Heidegger
url https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/65084/26231
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