Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism

Tim Ingold offers us an abstracted portrait of the world as ¿a meshwork of interwoven lines of growth and movement¿ (Ingold, 2010: 3). His concept of meshworks builds from Bruno Latour¿s Actor Network Theory, which proposes that our collective material and social worlds are not the result of an agen...

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Other Authors: Belden, Jackson Fletcher, Traube, Elizabeth G., Weiss, Joseph, 1985-
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/everywhere-summer-tanagers-fly-ethnography-birds-birding-and-ecotourism
https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/sites/default/files/2023-07/33834-Thumbnail%20Image.png
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spelling ftwesleyanu:oai:digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu:node-33834 2024-09-30T14:31:51+00:00 Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism Belden, Jackson Fletcher Traube, Elizabeth G. Weiss, Joseph, 1985- 2023-04-15 127 pages electronic https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/everywhere-summer-tanagers-fly-ethnography-birds-birding-and-ecotourism https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700 https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/sites/default/files/2023-07/33834-Thumbnail%20Image.png eng eng https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/everywhere-summer-tanagers-fly-ethnography-birds-birding-and-ecotourism https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700 https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/sites/default/files/2023-07/33834-Thumbnail%20Image.png In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted Birding Ecotourism Ornithology theses 2023 ftwesleyanu https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700 2024-09-12T14:11:01Z Tim Ingold offers us an abstracted portrait of the world as ¿a meshwork of interwoven lines of growth and movement¿ (Ingold, 2010: 3). His concept of meshworks builds from Bruno Latour¿s Actor Network Theory, which proposes that our collective material and social worlds are not the result of an agency held exclusively by human actors, often imagined as held by societies leading figures, but rather emerge from connections. Likewise, power is not a force exerted from above, but rather a physics flowing across these networks, although inequitably distributed (Latour, 1988). Therefore, humans and non-humans can never be understood in isolation. Rather, we are all caught up in an immeasurable complexity of interconnections. Even the concrete and steel of modern life is made vital by the Rock Pigeon and House Sparrow¿s nests. Birds are busy connecting the world through their movements. In movement they disperse pollen and then seeds and connect seemingly distinct realms of the world. The seabird connects the deep ocean to the island. The songbird connects the tropics to the arctic as they rush north for the boreal summer. The Cattle Egret connects the pasture to the heron rookery. And they connect humans to the non-human worlds surrounding us, as well as to other, distant human worlds where those birds travel. Birds, at least most of them, fly. While their songs, calls and plumages are accessible to direct human experience, their lifeworlds are deep and broad beyond human comprehension, though that only provokes us to try harder. We come to understand birds and their greater-than-human flows of life in what I call shining moments - events in which our worlds overlap, and we become entangled. Everywhere humans go there are birds. They are there in the background, and at times the foreground of every human life. But some of us seek moments in which they are brought into focus. In their search for entanglement, birders have worked to forge new connections, human and non-human, and learned to draw birds in and sustain ... Thesis Arctic Wesleyan University: WesScholar Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Wesleyan University: WesScholar
op_collection_id ftwesleyanu
language English
topic Birding
Ecotourism
Ornithology
spellingShingle Birding
Ecotourism
Ornithology
Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
topic_facet Birding
Ecotourism
Ornithology
description Tim Ingold offers us an abstracted portrait of the world as ¿a meshwork of interwoven lines of growth and movement¿ (Ingold, 2010: 3). His concept of meshworks builds from Bruno Latour¿s Actor Network Theory, which proposes that our collective material and social worlds are not the result of an agency held exclusively by human actors, often imagined as held by societies leading figures, but rather emerge from connections. Likewise, power is not a force exerted from above, but rather a physics flowing across these networks, although inequitably distributed (Latour, 1988). Therefore, humans and non-humans can never be understood in isolation. Rather, we are all caught up in an immeasurable complexity of interconnections. Even the concrete and steel of modern life is made vital by the Rock Pigeon and House Sparrow¿s nests. Birds are busy connecting the world through their movements. In movement they disperse pollen and then seeds and connect seemingly distinct realms of the world. The seabird connects the deep ocean to the island. The songbird connects the tropics to the arctic as they rush north for the boreal summer. The Cattle Egret connects the pasture to the heron rookery. And they connect humans to the non-human worlds surrounding us, as well as to other, distant human worlds where those birds travel. Birds, at least most of them, fly. While their songs, calls and plumages are accessible to direct human experience, their lifeworlds are deep and broad beyond human comprehension, though that only provokes us to try harder. We come to understand birds and their greater-than-human flows of life in what I call shining moments - events in which our worlds overlap, and we become entangled. Everywhere humans go there are birds. They are there in the background, and at times the foreground of every human life. But some of us seek moments in which they are brought into focus. In their search for entanglement, birders have worked to forge new connections, human and non-human, and learned to draw birds in and sustain ...
author2 Belden, Jackson Fletcher
Traube, Elizabeth G.
Weiss, Joseph, 1985-
format Thesis
title Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
title_short Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
title_full Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
title_fullStr Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
title_full_unstemmed Everywhere Summer Tanagers Fly: An Ethnography of Birds, Birding and Ecotourism
title_sort everywhere summer tanagers fly: an ethnography of birds, birding and ecotourism
publishDate 2023
url https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/everywhere-summer-tanagers-fly-ethnography-birds-birding-and-ecotourism
https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/sites/default/files/2023-07/33834-Thumbnail%20Image.png
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/everywhere-summer-tanagers-fly-ethnography-birds-birding-and-ecotourism
https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/sites/default/files/2023-07/33834-Thumbnail%20Image.png
op_rights In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
op_doi https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.1.2700
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