Architectures of domestication:on emplacing human-animal relations in the North

This article explores human-animal relationships in the North by calling for renewed attention to the infrastructures and architectures, which inscribe them. We draw attention to the self-limiting quality of Arctic architectures that are designed to emphasize mutual autonomy. This approach challenge...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Main Authors: Anderson, David G, Loovers, Jan Peter Laurens, Schroer, Sara Asu, Wishart, Robert P
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/architectures-of-domestication(e1d5ab9f-c28b-4244-a57c-bbb94f8b7d43).html
https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.12613
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Summary:This article explores human-animal relationships in the North by calling for renewed attention to the infrastructures and architectures, which inscribe them. We draw attention to the self-limiting quality of Arctic architectures that are designed to emphasize mutual autonomy. This approach challenges stark models that would create a crisp, clear separation between domestication as constituting a form of domination or a type of mutualism. By describing several key infrastructures of domestication – of tethers, enclosures, and traps – we hope to draw attention to the silencing of these domestic inventories. By revisiting the metaphor of the domus, we focus on the lands where these relationships are elaborated, relinking Arctic architectures to places of encounter. Drawing on in-depth fieldwork mainly from Northern North America and various sites in Northern Eurasia, we present an ethnographically informed account that stresses the nuanced way that strategies of control are blended with those of care and comfort creating unbounded homes that are good to live in.