Publication

Wild and Wonderful. An Ethnography of English Naturalists
Présentation
In Wild and Wonderful, social anthropologist Vanessa Manceron investigates an understudied but indispensable scientific practice: getting to know and recognize the living worlds around us. Her research takes her to England, where a longstanding naturalist tradition brings together professionals, academics, and amateurs to study the world around them. Observing the natural world here is regarded not as a simple hobby, but as a necessary activity. This is participatory science, an itinerant brand of scholarship that immerses itself in a specific and delimited territory, meticulously documenting the species living there and how they develop and expand their domain or regress and disappear.
Manceron leads us through woods and fields, showing us another way of looking, of paying attention to minute differences, sounds, and variations of color. Her book is both a contribution to the anthropology of science and an opportunity to take a fresh look at our relationship with nature, affording us a glimpse of another way of living and living with.
Sommaire
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Knowing and Recognizing
1. Involvement An English Countryside Connecting Watching Over
2. Pairing Genesis Coming into Contact
3. A Window on Existence Completeness Freeing Oneself
4. Assembling Microcosm Classifications and Variations
5. Collating Specimens and Images Misidentifying Perceptual Pitfalls Fusing
6. Wonderful Creatures Avian Zoography Otherness and Immersion Parting the Curtain
7. Vanishing Still Succumbing What Is Going on? The Burden of Responsibility Recomposing
Conclusion. A Form of Attention
References
Illustrations