conference
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Africa Knows! It is time to decolonise minds
Accepted Paper: E35-03.
To panel E35.
Title of paper:
Experiments in using non-human animals as 'respondents' by working with Southern African animal communicators: traversing the nature/culture divide and implications for scientific knowledge making
Short abstract paper:
Long abstract paper: A wide variety of peoples in Africa and beyond perceive human and non-human animal worlds as interactive and indivisible (High 2010; Rival 1993; Ingold 1994). These understandings of personhood, agency and the non-human world fundamentally challenge Northern notions, and have implications for understandings of knowledge as well as the nature of doing research. The academically almost ignored case of animal communicators, who traverse the nature/culture dichotomy in practice, forms an ideal counterpart to the often largely theoretical discussions of the ontological and species turns. These are people who engage in detailed, two-way, non-verbal and non-physical forms of communication with non-human animals, a practice which has come to be known as intuitive interspecies communication (IIC) (Barrett et al. 2018). Their presence has boomed recently especially due to famous South African individuals as Anna Breytenbach, Wynter Worsthorne and Linda Tucker. Employing a multi-sited ethnography at the intersection of multispecies approaches and ethnographies of encounter, I engage with the practices and ontologies of four successful Southern African animal communicators who reside and/or work in Southern Africa, but whose lives dynamically entangle geographical and cultural affinities, effectively mashing-up Indigenous, settler, modern, traditional, African and European identities. Co-constructing understandings and approaches with them, I am experimenting with practices to include non-human animals as full research participants, for example by engaging in interviews with these animals, using animal communicators as interpreters. My objective is to inspire productive reflections on and restructuring of the premises of scientific thinking, thus aiming for African knowledges to disrupt and contribute to cutting-edge theoretical debates surrounding the ontological turn and species turn and influence more-than-human approaches in decolonisation of knowledge and cognitive justice debates.
* This conference took place from December 2020 to February 2021 * |