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  • Introduction
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The proposal of the new “Anthropocene” geological age in the beginning of the 21st century has led to humans being seen as the primary agents driving the large-scale destruction of our planet. This has led to the development of multispecies ethnographies focusing on the situated relatedness that binds humans into multispecies communities. There has been a shift in perspective from the behavior of humans as a single species to the entanglement of many species. In turn, multispecies ethnography has helped amplify the discipline through research on the entanglement of multiple species, interactions between art and performance geared at speculation and experiment, collaborations with other disciplines and practitioners, and conducting multi-sited research. This special issue features three multispecies ethnographies: one that focuses on how non-humans, as agents who have escaped human control, have entangled with many other species to survive and thrive, and two that argue that it is not always humans who have harmed the planet and destroyed nature everywhere.

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  • 文化人類学

    文化人類学 86 (1), 044-056, 2021-06-30

    日本文化人類学会

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