Number of the records: 1  

'Of Ravens and Men’: Multispecies Encounters with Plastics in a Czech Wastescape

  1. 1.
    0545213 - EÚ 2022 eng A - Abstract
    Sosna, Daniel
    'Of Ravens and Men’: Multispecies Encounters with Plastics in a Czech Wastescape.
    2021.
    [Association of Social Anthropology of the UK. 29.03.2021-02.04.2021, St. Andrews]
    R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GA20-06759S
    Institutional support: RVO:68378076
    Keywords : waste * plastics * multispecies research
    OECD category: Antropology, ethnology
    https://theasa.org/conferences/asa2021/panels#9926

    Plastic waste raises questions about responsibility for its open-ended engagements and effects across the human and non-human realms. There are two questions that require attention. First, what are the limits for imagining and attributing responsibility for plastic waste beyond the human? Second, what would the concept of responsibility look like if one used plastic waste’s capacity to engage in unexpected relations? Building upon Laidlaw’s view of responsibility, I explore how non-human organisms’ engagement with plastics co-creates responsibility. This paper is based on my ethnographic research of Czech wastescapes where I experienced different conceptualizations and contestations of responsibility for plastic waste being ‘out of place’ because of the activities of cunning nonhuman agents: the ravens. These birds developed skills to find and retrieve food waste from the surface of a landfill. The transport of food waste is facilitated by various plastic containers that the ravens drop to the ground and thus create accumulations of waste in the woods. The ravens appear in the nexus between the waste company, farmers, hunters, foresters, other animals and plants. The company contemplates about its responsibility for animal littering and cleaning the surrounding woods, farmers blame the ravens for hurting the calves on their pastures, hunters feel responsibility for keeping the balance in ‘nature’, and foresters cut down the trees to reduce opportunities for ravens’ littering. Rather than searching for a single source or notion of responsibility, I examine the frictions in multispecies interactions to propose a notion of distributed responsibility growing along the relations.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0322436

     
     
Number of the records: 1  

  This site uses cookies to make them easier to browse. Learn more about how we use cookies.