Editors' introduction to the special issue "Privilege, vulnerability and care: Interspecies dynamics in rural landscapes"




Wadham Helen, Schuurman Nora, Dashper Katherine

PublisherWiley-Blackwell

2024

Sociologia Ruralis

SOCIOLOGIA RURALIS

64

2

171

179

0038-0199

1467-9523

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/soru.12477

https://doi.org/10.1111/soru.12477

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/387738667



Animals are central actors within rural societies but remain largely invisible within both our empirical and theoretical analyses. Approximately 20 years ago in the pages of this journal, Tovey (2003) pointed to the significance of animals in effectively defining rurality: They are central to the rural economy and society and foster a sense among rural residents that they are organically embedded in an interspecies world. Thus, our shared relations with animals are key to understanding rural social relations and their underlying inequalities and hierarchies. Tovey suggested that it was therefore necessary and appropriate that rural sociology should develop its own approach to including animals in theorising rural society. We believe that such an approach is yet to emerge. The aim of this special issue is to outline what such an approach might look like and to present a diverse range of articles to get it underway. In what follows, then, as editors and contributors, we collectively explore the role and significance of human–animal relations in shaping rural society via a particular focus on relations of privilege, vulnerability and care.


Last updated on 2025-21-03 at 10:57