Living with Wolves: Affects, Feelings and Sentiments in Human-Wolf-Coexistence (Human-Animal Studies)

$36.77
by Thorsten Gieser

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With their return to Germany, wolves leave their traces in personal feelings, in the atmospheres of rural landscapes and even in the sentiments and moods that govern political arenas. Thorsten Gieser explores the role of affects, emotions, moods and atmospheres in the emerging coexistence between humans and wolves. Bridging the gap between anthropology and ethology, the author literally walks in the tracks of wolves to follow their affective agency in a more-than-human society. In nuanced analyses, he shows how wolves move, irritate and excite us, offering answers to the primary question: What does it feel like to coexist with these large predators? "»Drawing from the natural sciences, social sciences and the humanities ‒ including behavioural ecology, the human dimensions of wildlife, environmental anthropology and animal geography ‒ this book is a great example of interdisciplinarity in practice. This book is an engaging, thought-provoking and stimulating read that is relevant not only for academics and practitioners but also for other interest groups as well as general readers interested in managing a shared (co)existence with non-human others.«" -- Valerio Donfrancesco ― Conservation and Society, 1-2 ( 2024) "»One of the main insights we get from this nicely written and well-argued book is that not all wolves are the same. As in relations between humans, knowing the idiosyncrasies of a specific wolf individual can be crucial for balancing encounters in an increasingly tight ecology ...The author seems right in observing that, whether we like it or not, current socioecological dynamics lead us to be ‘more and more entangled’ with wolves, wild boars, raccoons, ducks, nutrias, and many other wild species.«" ― Aníbal G. Arregui, Social Anthropology, 33/2 (2025) "»›Living with wolves‹ is an excellent example of multispecies ethnography. It is a timely intervention from a continent where large carnivores are undergoing a resurgence and increasingly coming into conflict with humans.«" ― Marcus Baynes-Rock, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1/23 (2026) Thorsten Gieser is a Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Koblenz and a Research Associate in the ERC project »Veterinarization of Europe? Hunting for Wild Boar Futures in the Time of African Swine Fever (BOAR)« at the Czech Academy of Sciences. He is an environmental anthropologist with a focus on human-wildlife-coexistence in Germany, specialising in the return of wolves and hunting as a form of human-animal relation.

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