FROM ENVIRONMENTAL CASE STUDY TO ENVIRONMENTAL KIN STUDY

ANJA KANNGIESER & ZOE TODD

History and Theory 59, no. 3 (2020)

This article explores the relationships among place, knowing, and being in environmental histories. Grounding ourselves in the work of Indigenous scholars from North America and the Pacific, we propose a method of listening and attuning that can attend to the dislocation and abstraction often found in work addressing ecocide and environmental violence. Against the ubiquity of the case-study approach, we propose a method we call “kin study,” which invites more embedded, expansive, material, and respectful relations to people and lands. This article frames the issues and then proposes, though a dialogue, how kin studies may be constituted and applied in studying environmental histories of the Pacific and Western Canada.

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NATURAL HISTORIES FOR THE ANTHROPOCENE