The lives of non-human animals, their ways of being and seeing, their experiences and knowledge, and their relationships with each other, continue to be ignored, discounted, written over and destroyed by anthropocentric practices and endeavours. Within the vestiges of colonialism, this silence and occlusion co-opts and consumes animals, physically and culturally, into the servitude of human interests, and selective narratives of history and progress.
Decolonising Animals brings together critical interrogations, case studies and creative explorations that identify and examine how non-human animals are affected by and respond to colonial structures and processes. This collection includes the perspectives of Indigenous and non-Indigenous scholars, artists and activists, detailing the ways in which they question colonial ways of knowing, engaging with and representing animals. Importantly, the book offers suggestions for how we might decolonise our relationships with non-human animals – and with each other.
Acknowledgements
About the contributors
Introduction: Unsettling subjects / Rick De Vos
- The horse is Indigenous to North America: why silencing the horse is so important to the settler project / Kelsey Dayle John
- “Red I am”: names for dingoes in science and story / Rowena Lennox
- Reading Toni Morrison close and far: decolonising literary animal studies / Susan McHugh
- Mass extinction and responsibility / Katarina Gray-Sharp
- Crypsis, discovery and subjectivity: unsettling fish histories / Rick De Vos
- Speculative shit: bison world-making and dung pat pluralities / Danielle Taschereau Mamers*
- The jaguar gaze: is it possible to decolonise human–animal relationships through archaeology? / Ana Paula Motta and Martin Porr
- The birdwomen speak: “storied transformation” and non-human narrative perspectives / Kirsty Dunn
Index
Rick De Vos conducts research in animal studies and in anthropogenic extinction, in particular its cultural and historical significance and the ways in which it is articulated and practised. He is an adjunct research fellow in the Centre for Culture and Technology at Curtin University in Western Australia, and before that coordinated the Research and Graduate Studies Programs at the Centre for Aboriginal Studies at Curtin. He is a member of the Extinction Studies Working Group and has published essays on extinction in various academic journals and essay collections, including Knowing Animals (2007), Animal Death (2013), Extinction Studies: Stories of Time, Death and Generations (2017), and The Edinburgh Companion to Animal Studies (2018). With Matthew Chrulew he edited a special issue of Cultural Studies Review in 2019 entitled Extinction Studies: Stories of Unravelling and Reworlding.
"Boldly, and at times fiercely, true to the spirit of decolonization, this volume brings together a rich diversity of scholarly voices to challenge old complacencies about human-animal relationships. A wonderfully varied yet impressively coherent collection of fresh perspectives on literature, archaeology, extinction, colonisation, and the exploitation of peoples, animals, and environments."
– Professor Philip Armstrong, New Zealand Centre for Human-Animal Studies