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Collaborating with a Pest? Recounting an Encounter Between Moles and Archaeologists.

Authors :
Cahn, Livia
Source :
Anthropocenes: Human, Inhuman, Posthuman; 2023, Vol. 4 Issue 1, p1-10, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This piece is about a close encounter between the mole and archaeologists. This is nothing new. Archaeologists are accustomed to taking the "disturbances" that moles produce into account in their working assumptions. Indeed, archaeologists tend to agree with other soil practitioners such as farmers and gardeners that moles are a pest for perturbing soils. The market is abrim with all sorts of pungent flower bulbs, devices that emit vibrations, gas, or explosives that flood, pinch and trap moles. This piece centres on a very specific context, a research group based at Ghent University studying the site of a medieval settlement north of Bruges where archaeologists work with the shards of pottery contained in the soils moles bring to the surface. In their research, the assumption that moles are a nuisance is suspended by engaging molehills in a new but low-tech scientific practice. This piece tackles the wider question of what a pest is by enrolling the practice of these archaeologists into a history of multi-species social science perspectives. It thinks through the dynamics of categories that species come up against and slide in and out of (Haraway 2008). It is, therefore, a piece about more than human species. It is also a piece about soils. The soils that emerge involve many different species and not just humans but other living beings including moles, worms, badgers, insects, and plants. Lending attention to soils brings with it socio-cultural associations, tools such as sieves, and legislations about animals and archaeological digs. Densely inhabited and littered with remnants of human activities and histories, we might call these multispecies social soils. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26334321
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Anthropocenes: Human, Inhuman, Posthuman
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175558349
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.16997/ahip.1435