Authors
Steve Hinchliffe, Matthew B Kearnes, Monica Degen, Sarah Whatmore
Publication date
2005/10
Journal
Environment and planning D: Society and Space
Volume
23
Issue
5
Pages
643-658
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Cities are inhabited by all manner of things and made up of all manner of practices, many of which are unnoticed by urban politics and disregarded by science. In this paper we do two things. First, we add to the sense that urban living spaces involve much more than human worlds and are often prime sites for human and nonhuman ecologies. Second, we experiment with what is involved in taking these nonhuman worlds and ecologies seriously and in producing a politics for urban wilds. In order to do this we learn how to sense urban wildlife. In learning new engagements we also learn new things and in particular come to see urban wilds as matters of controversy. For this reason we have borrowed and adapted Latour's language to talk of wild things. Wild things become more rather than less real as people learn to engage with them. At the same time, wild things are too disputed, sociable, and uncertain to become …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Hinchliffe, MB Kearnes, M Degen, S Whatmore - Environment and planning D: Society and Space, 2005