Booth, Robert (2025) Herding Katz: Rewilding, paradox, and domination. Environmental Values. ISSN 0963-2719 (Accepted for Publication)
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Abstract
Eric Katz has recently claimed not only that rewilding is inherently paradoxical, but also that its paradoxes reveal rewilding’s implication in the very mindset of anthropocentric domination against which it is floated as a partial solution. In this paper, I argue that rewilding need not in principle be committed to a pernicious anthropocentrism. With the assistance of an important distinction between ‘synchronic’ and ‘diachronic’ wildness, I firstly argue that rewilding need not be viciously paradoxical in any unequivocal sense. I then suggest, with the aid of Henry David Thoreau’s account of synchronic wildness, that rewilding might rather be geared to inculcate
hypersensitivity to nonhuman otherness particularly conducive to an anti-domination mindset. Hence rewilding may remain a live tool in responding to the challenges which characterise our shared world.
Item Type: | Article |
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Keywords: | rewilding; Eric Katz; anthropocentrism; Henry David Thoreau; ecological restoration |
Faculty / Department: | Faculty of Creative Arts & Humanities > School of Humanities |
Depositing User: | Robert Booth |
Date Deposited: | 23 Apr 2025 14:05 |
Last Modified: | 23 Apr 2025 14:05 |
URI: | https://hira.hope.ac.uk/id/eprint/4647 |
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