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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Multispecies leisure: Human-animal interactions in leisure landscapes

TLDR
In this paper, the authors consider leisure with nonhuman others, both domestic and wild, by exploring the "contact zones" between humans and other species and, in doing so, create an interspecies lens through which to explore these encounters.
Abstract
The emerging multidisciplinary field of human-animal studies encourages researchers to move beyond human-centric practices and to recognise that human and nonhuman beings are positioned within shared ecological, social, cultural and political spaces whereby nonhumans have become key actors worthy of moral consideration and play a fundamental role in humans’ lives. With some exceptions (e.g. Carr, 2014; Dashper, 2018; Danby, 2018; Danby & Finkel, 2018; Young & Carr, 2018), leisure studies has been slow to embrace this ‘animal turn’ and consider how leisure actions, experiences and landscapes are shaped through multispecies encounters between humans, other animals, reptiles, fish and the natural environment. This special issue begins to address this gap by considering leisure as more-than-human experiences. We consider leisure with nonhuman others, both domestic and wild, by exploring the ‘contact zones’ between humans and other species and, in doing so, we create an interspecies lens through which to explore these encounters. The research presented in this special issue takes into consideration the affective and ethical dimensions of human-nonhuman animal entanglements in leisure spaces and the need to strive for reciprocal, mutual welfare and wellbeing. Through the use of innovative methodological approaches, the authors explore a range of issues and perspectives to capture shared experiences of interspecies leisure pursuits. This special issue provides direction for future ways in which research on multispecies leisure, and its associated mutual benefits, can be done to advance understanding and practice in the field. The special issue seeks to ‘bring the animal in’ to the leisure studies domain and contribute to greater understanding of leisure as a complex, interwoven multispecies phenomenon.

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When Species Meet

TL;DR: In this paper, a what-if scenario on what could happen if we plan for the horse and who else that could benefit from that is presented, where the horse is the centre of the stable and the equestrian sport.
Journal ArticleDOI

Instagranimal: Animal Welfare and Animal Ethics Challenges of Animal-Based Tourism.

TL;DR: It is concluded that reforms and individual travel decisions as a result of biosecurity concerns will impact animal welfare, and that technology has a dual role to play in enhancing edutainment but also potentially inviting new challenges.
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Where species don’t meet: Invisibilized animals, urban nature and city limits:

TL;DR: A growing body of literature is concerned with "healing" our cities, fostering an ethic of care for urban nature and creating more socially and environmentally just cities as mentioned in this paper. But at the same time, urban...
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Everyday Life Construction, Outdoor Activity and Health Practice among Urban Empty Nesters and Their Companion Dogs in Guangzhou, China.

TL;DR: This paper focuses on the co-disciplined pursuit of outdoor activities by urban empty nesters and their companion dogs; this pursuit represents a shared leisure practice that maintains multispecies kinship and is a creative way for older individuals to improve their happiness and physical functioning.
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Mobile video ethnography for evoking animals in tourism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore mobile video ethnography as a way to account for and understand how tourism emerges through encounters between living agents, and demonstrate how mobile multispecies video ethnographies contributes to gaining access to the intimate spaces of human-animal encounters in tourism.
References
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Book

Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning

Karen Barad
TL;DR: Barad, a theoretical physicist and feminist theorist, elaborates her theory of agential realism as mentioned in this paper, which is at once a new epistemology, ontology, and ethics.
Book

When Species Meet

TL;DR: When Species Meet as discussed by the authors explores philosophical, cultural, and biological aspects of animal-human encounters and finds that respect, curiosity, and knowledge spring from animal and human associations and work powerfully against ideas about human exceptionalism.
Book

The Companion Species Manifesto : Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness

Donna Haraway
TL;DR: The Companion Species Manifesto as discussed by the authors is about the implosion of nature and culture in the joint lives of dogs and people, who are bonded in significant otherness, in all their historical complexity, Donna Haraway tells us, dogs are not surrogates for theory, she says; they are not here just to think with.
Journal ArticleDOI

The emergence of multispecies ethnography

TL;DR: Anthropologists have been committed, at least since Franz Boas, to investigating relationships between nature and culture, and this enduring interest was inflected with some new twists as mentioned in this paper.

When Species Meet

TL;DR: In this paper, a what-if scenario on what could happen if we plan for the horse and who else that could benefit from that is presented, where the horse is the centre of the stable and the equestrian sport.
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