The Care of Migrants: Telemetry and the Fragile Wild

Abstract Drawing on a multi-sited study of transnational efforts to safeguard the highly endangered Lesser White-fronted Goose (Anser Erythropus), the text develops an argument about a certain “biopolitics of the wild”—a particular mode of governing nonhuman life, rooted in certain conditions of vis...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Humanities
Main Author: Reinert, Hugo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Duke University Press 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/22011919-3611212
https://read.dukeupress.edu/environmental-humanities/article-pdf/3/1/1/251583/1Reinert.pdf
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Summary:Abstract Drawing on a multi-sited study of transnational efforts to safeguard the highly endangered Lesser White-fronted Goose (Anser Erythropus), the text develops an argument about a certain “biopolitics of the wild”—a particular mode of governing nonhuman life, rooted in certain conditions of visibility and engagement. As a wild avian population, the Lessers are known and managed primarily through practices of asymmetrical intimacy, such as field observation and telemetry. These practices, in turn, determine the emergence of biopower in a specific modality, as a power that takes hold of its object—and generates it— in a mode of constitutive withdrawal. Outlining the shape and parameters of this withdrawn presence, the essay locates “the wild” at a complex, awkward juncture in contemporary human-nonhuman relations: simultaneously an object of control and withdrawal, absence and intimacy, wildness and impurity; a site of complex and intractable controversies—but also, perhaps, of hope.