Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park

Abstract This paper tracks human–animal entanglements through one particular species, Canis lupus , the wolf, with a view to exploring how this contested predator might be used to unpack normative assumptions about wildlife science, conservation practice and storytelling. The focus of attention here...

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Published in:BJHS Themes
Main Author: JONES, KAREN R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.5
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/S2058850X17000054
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spelling crcambridgeupr:10.1017/bjt.2017.5 2024-06-09T07:45:18+00:00 Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park JONES, KAREN R. 2017 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.5 https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/S2058850X17000054 en eng Cambridge University Press (CUP) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ BJHS Themes volume 2, page 151-168 ISSN 2058-850X 2056-354X journal-article 2017 crcambridgeupr https://doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.5 2024-05-15T13:02:09Z Abstract This paper tracks human–animal entanglements through one particular species, Canis lupus , the wolf, with a view to exploring how this contested predator might be used to unpack normative assumptions about wildlife science, conservation practice and storytelling. The focus of attention here is on Yellowstone National Park and the century-long struggle to eradicate and then restore the wolf based on the shifting rubrics of science and environmental ethics. The ‘wild heart’ of North America and a centre of scientific and popular environmental mythology, Yellowstone presents a useful terrain (both material and contextual) in which to theorize the wolf as an environmental agent and explore its special provenance within an evolving narrative of ecological science. More specifically, the landmark story of restor(y)ation that played out in the national park serves to illuminate the complex web of temporality, narrative and memory that frames our configurations of animal agency. Wiped out in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and ruminated on in the interwar period, the wolf was returned to ancestral haunts in the 1990s (to great fanfare) as a charismatic poster animal for environmental consciousness and a vital ‘missing link’ in the psychological and biotic fabric of the landscape. Ornamented with what conservationist Aldo Leopold famously called a ‘fierce green fire’, the wolf became a carrier animal for Yellowstone's environmental memory, transporting with it the fates of other threatened species and the promise of an enlightened Ecological Age. Beneath this teleological tale of expanding biological knowledge and ethical awakening lies a convoluted (and interesting) story that reveals the sinuous connections between the material and the imagined animal as well as the challenges and the complexities of reading non-human traces. Article in Journal/Newspaper Canis lupus Cambridge University Press BJHS Themes 2 151 168
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language English
description Abstract This paper tracks human–animal entanglements through one particular species, Canis lupus , the wolf, with a view to exploring how this contested predator might be used to unpack normative assumptions about wildlife science, conservation practice and storytelling. The focus of attention here is on Yellowstone National Park and the century-long struggle to eradicate and then restore the wolf based on the shifting rubrics of science and environmental ethics. The ‘wild heart’ of North America and a centre of scientific and popular environmental mythology, Yellowstone presents a useful terrain (both material and contextual) in which to theorize the wolf as an environmental agent and explore its special provenance within an evolving narrative of ecological science. More specifically, the landmark story of restor(y)ation that played out in the national park serves to illuminate the complex web of temporality, narrative and memory that frames our configurations of animal agency. Wiped out in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and ruminated on in the interwar period, the wolf was returned to ancestral haunts in the 1990s (to great fanfare) as a charismatic poster animal for environmental consciousness and a vital ‘missing link’ in the psychological and biotic fabric of the landscape. Ornamented with what conservationist Aldo Leopold famously called a ‘fierce green fire’, the wolf became a carrier animal for Yellowstone's environmental memory, transporting with it the fates of other threatened species and the promise of an enlightened Ecological Age. Beneath this teleological tale of expanding biological knowledge and ethical awakening lies a convoluted (and interesting) story that reveals the sinuous connections between the material and the imagined animal as well as the challenges and the complexities of reading non-human traces.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author JONES, KAREN R.
spellingShingle JONES, KAREN R.
Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
author_facet JONES, KAREN R.
author_sort JONES, KAREN R.
title Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
title_short Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
title_full Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
title_fullStr Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
title_full_unstemmed Restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in Yellowstone National Park
title_sort restor(y)ing the ‘fierce green fire’: animal agency, wolf conservation and environmental memory in yellowstone national park
publisher Cambridge University Press (CUP)
publishDate 2017
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.5
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/S2058850X17000054
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source BJHS Themes
volume 2, page 151-168
ISSN 2058-850X 2056-354X
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1017/bjt.2017.5
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