Fools Gold on the Prairies

The "ontological turn" in anthropology is linked to the insight that environmental thinking requires reflecting on conflicting ways of "being and becoming in the world". This article explores how large-scale industrial farmers engage with the world, their ontic relationship with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Birgit Müller
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2015-05-01
Series:Swiss Journal of Sociocultural Anthropology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-sa.ch/article/view/7434
Description
Summary:The "ontological turn" in anthropology is linked to the insight that environmental thinking requires reflecting on conflicting ways of "being and becoming in the world". This article explores how large-scale industrial farmers engage with the world, their ontic relationship with seeds, their direct reconnection to reality and sensorial perception of the non-human. However, seeds not only become what they are in multifarious networks of natural, cultural and political agencies, but their emergence and co-evolution with humans is ruptured through deregistration, persecution, confiscation and destruction. Proprietary industrial seed varieties carry instrumental rationality and control into the fields of Canadian farmers that are hard to resist.
ISSN:2813-5229
2813-5237