This article explores the potential of giving animals a more prominent role in landscape studies. Through an historical constructivist approach, animals can function as object, text, happening, and as a fragment of a larger environmental history. Using empirical examples from Norway and Scotland, animals’ symbolic, social, and cultural availability are addressed. After presenting two case studies I claim that we can enrich our understanding of rural landscapes by including animals. Animals help uncover the meanings people embed in their landscape. By using the term animalscape, animals can more straightforwardly be incorporated both methodologically and analytically in rural studies
The discourse of Animal Studies has been gaining momentum as a scholarly discipline, advanced in rem...
Rewilding has become a hot topic in nature conservation. Ambitious schemes are afoot to rewild conti...
This thesis is concerned with acknowledging farm animals and their co-presence in the more-than-huma...
This article explores the potential of giving animals a more prominent role in landscape studies. Th...
This paper reviews research on livestock and landscape. It argues that farm animals have started to ...
Landscapes are complex outplays of intersecting flows of agency in which humans and non-humans combi...
This paper describes student work in a seminar and field school that use research through desi...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
This thesis is concerned with acknowledging farm animals and their co-presence in the more-than-huma...
This thematic issue of Research in Arts and Education focuses on exploring research with species oth...
Landscapes are complex outplays of intersecting flows of agency in which humans and non-humans combi...
Landscapes are sites of struggle for many ways of being, human and nonhuman. This paper draws attent...
In the outskirts of Tromsø, the largest city in northern Norway, both reindeer herders and sheep far...
The article proposes discussion of John Lewis-Stempel’s Meadowland (2015) developed along two perspe...
This article introduces the concept of animals’ atmospheres, as a contribution to work in animal and...
The discourse of Animal Studies has been gaining momentum as a scholarly discipline, advanced in rem...
Rewilding has become a hot topic in nature conservation. Ambitious schemes are afoot to rewild conti...
This thesis is concerned with acknowledging farm animals and their co-presence in the more-than-huma...
This article explores the potential of giving animals a more prominent role in landscape studies. Th...
This paper reviews research on livestock and landscape. It argues that farm animals have started to ...
Landscapes are complex outplays of intersecting flows of agency in which humans and non-humans combi...
This paper describes student work in a seminar and field school that use research through desi...
Human-animal relationships have long existed, across cultures, in many varied forms. The association...
This thesis is concerned with acknowledging farm animals and their co-presence in the more-than-huma...
This thematic issue of Research in Arts and Education focuses on exploring research with species oth...
Landscapes are complex outplays of intersecting flows of agency in which humans and non-humans combi...
Landscapes are sites of struggle for many ways of being, human and nonhuman. This paper draws attent...
In the outskirts of Tromsø, the largest city in northern Norway, both reindeer herders and sheep far...
The article proposes discussion of John Lewis-Stempel’s Meadowland (2015) developed along two perspe...
This article introduces the concept of animals’ atmospheres, as a contribution to work in animal and...
The discourse of Animal Studies has been gaining momentum as a scholarly discipline, advanced in rem...
Rewilding has become a hot topic in nature conservation. Ambitious schemes are afoot to rewild conti...
This thesis is concerned with acknowledging farm animals and their co-presence in the more-than-huma...