Kin: Thinking with Deborah Bird Rose


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Description

The contributors to Kin draw on the work of anthropologist Deborah Bird Rose (1946-2018), a foundational voice in environmental humanities, to examine the relationships of interdependence and obligation between human and nonhuman lives. Through a close engagement over many decades with the Aboriginal communities of Yarralin and Lingara in northern Australia, Rose's work explored possibilities for entangled forms of social and environmental justice. She sought to bring the insights of her Indigenous teachers into dialogue with the humanities and the natural sciences to describe and passionately advocate for a world of kin grounded in a profound sense of the connectivities and relationships that hold us together. Kin's contributors take up Rose's conceptual frameworks, often pushing academic fields beyond their traditional objects and methods of study. Together, the essays do more than pay tribute to Rose's scholarship; they extend her ideas and underscore her ongoing critical and ethical relevance for a world still enduring and resisting ecocide and genocide.

Contributors. The Bawaka Collective, Matthew Chrulew, Colin Dayan, Linda Payi Ford, Donna Haraway, James Hatley, Owain Jones, Stephen Muecke, Kate Rigby, Catriona (Cate) Sandilands, Isabelle Stengers, Anna Tsing, Thom van Dooren, Kate Wright

Author: Thom Van Dooren
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 04/01/2022
Pages: 248
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.74lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.52d
ISBN13: 9781478018056
ISBN10: 1478018054
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Indigenous Studies
- Nature | Environmental Conservation & Protection | General
- Social Science | Gender Studies

About the Author
Thom van Dooren is a field philosopher and writer at the University of Sydney and author of The Wake of Crows: Living and Dying in Shared Worlds.

Matthew Chrulew is a writer and researcher at Curtin University and coeditor of Field Philosophy and Other Experiments.