Поиск по каталогу |
(строгое соответствие)
|
- Профессиональная
- Научно-популярная
- Художественная
- Публицистика
- Детская
- Искусство
- Хобби, семья, дом
- Спорт
- Путеводители
- Блокноты, тетради, открытки
Canadianness is Wilderness?. Violent Love Relationships with ‘Wild’ Bodies
В наличии
Местонахождение: Алматы | Состояние экземпляра: новый |
Бумажная
версия
версия
Автор: Amanda Marynowycz
ISBN: 9783659571060
Год издания: 2014
Формат книги: 60×90/16 (145×215 мм)
Количество страниц: 296
Издательство: LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Цена: 41271 тг
Положить в корзину
Способы доставки в город Алматы * комплектация (срок до отгрузки) не более 2 рабочих дней |
Самовывоз из города Алматы (пункты самовывоза партнёра CDEK) |
Курьерская доставка CDEK из города Москва |
Доставка Почтой России из города Москва |
Аннотация: This book reveals contradictions that Canadians experience with groups attached to western construction of wilderness namely Indigenous people and wildlife. My study analyzes how the discourse of Canadian wilderness identity is played out in Algonquin Provincial Park and Bruce Peninsula National Park in comparison to non-nature/urban spaces (Greater Toronto Area). I undertake three main tasks: 1) I describe how violent love is a dominant discourse at the Parks, 2) I examine evidence of animals and Indigenous people being produced relationally in the Parks, and 3) I analyze how relationships are spatially organized. My research reveals that the Parks conceal practices of violence that are central to the intersections of speciesism and colonialism. An important argument that I highlight within this book is how violent love operates across a continuum that is influenced by spatial belonging and distance. This book is useful to a wide range of professionals including: geographers, animal rights scholars, race and Indigenous studies, nature and wildlife studies, as well as individuals who are perplexed by how contradictions shape and govern humans’ experiences and attitudes.
Ключевые слова: Nature, violence, indigenous people, Colonialism, animals, wilderness, contradictions, Wildlife, and Nationalism.