In recent decades, a series of socio-economic and ecological transformations have facilitated the return of large carnivores to areas where they had been previously extirpated. These rewilding processes, whether autonomous or human-driven, are often accompanied by increasingly conflictual relationships that undermine long-term coexistence and pose new challenges related to how to live with a presence that may be as uncomfortable as it is spectacular.
This presentation draws on ethnographic research in Trentino, Italy, to explore tracking as both a methodological tool and object of inquiry. In particular, it explores tracking as a multifaceted set of practices that underscores important aspects of the contemporary spatial and affective dimensions of human, bear and wolf cohabitation. Indeed, tracking is a privileged activity for investigating the interplay between space, power, technology, knowledge systems and more-than-human agencies in the context of conservation. As a scientific activity, tracking involves wildlife monitoring, data collection and mapping, with significant implications for biosecurity and conservation policies (O'Mahony, Corradini & Gazzola, 2018). Simultaneously is an affective embodied experience that engages the tracker with the multisensory and multispecies fabric of the landscapes (Morizot, 2021, Gandy, 2024). ‘To trace’ is above all to follow paths that connect visibility and invisibility, presence and absence. Traces and paths are the interweaving of multi-temporal lines of movements inscribed in the landscape that, once retraced, allow us to explore how landscapes are formed, transformed and inhabited by human and non-human beings (Ingold, 2010, Du Plessis, 2022).
The ethnographic involvement in tracking activities conducted both by field-scientists, citizen-scientists and unprofessional naturalists, unfolded the potential of tracking as a methodology for multispecies ethnography. In particular, three aspects of tracking practices are discussed: knowledge-making, landscaping, and metamorphosis. These dimensions highlight how tracking unsettle traditional binarism such as nature/artificial, human/nonhuman and science/local knowledge and opens up a space of possibility for rethinking coexistence as a multispecies relational achievement.
References
Du Plessis, Pierre
2022 Tracking meat of the sand: Noticing multispecies landscapes in the Kalahari. Environmental Humanities, 14(1), 49-70.
Gandy, Matthew
2024 Attentive Observation: Walking, Listening, Staying Put. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 1-19.
Ingold, Tim
2000 The Perception of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill. London and New York: routledge.
Ingold, Tim
2010 Footprints through the weather-world: walking, breathing, knowing. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 16: S121–S139.
Morizot, Baptiste
2020 Sulla pista animale. Nottetempo.
O’Mahony, Kieran, Corradini, Andrea, & Gazzola, Andrea
2018 Lupine becomings—tracking and assembling Romanian wolves through multi-sensory fieldwork. society & animals, 26(2), 107-129.