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Multispecies Leisure: Human-Animal Interactions in Leisure
Landscapes seeks to ‘bring the animal in’ to the leisure
studies domain and contribute to greater understanding of leisure
as a complex, interwoven multispecies phenomenon. The emerging
multidisciplinary field of human-animal studies encourages
researchers to move beyond narrow focus on human-centric practices
and ways of being in the world, and to recognise that human and
non-human beings are positioned within shared ecological, social,
cultural and political spaces. With some exceptions, leisure
studies has been slow to embrace the ‘animal turn’ and consider
how leisure actions, experiences and landscapes are shaped through
multispecies encounters between humans, other animals, birds and
insects, plants and environment. This book begins to address this
gap by presenting research that considers leisure as
more-than-human experiences. The authors consider leisure with
nonhuman others (e.g. dogs, horses), affecting those others (e.g.
environmental concerns) and affected by the non-human (e.g.
landscape, weather), by exploring the ‘contact zones’ between
humans and other species. Thus, this work contributes to greater
understanding of leisure as a complex, multispecies phenomenon. The
chapters in this book were originally published as a Special Issue
of the Leisure Studies.
Multispecies Leisure: Human-Animal Interactions in Leisure
Landscapes seeks to 'bring the animal in' to the leisure studies
domain and contribute to greater understanding of leisure as a
complex, interwoven multispecies phenomenon. The emerging
multidisciplinary field of human-animal studies encourages
researchers to move beyond narrow focus on human-centric practices
and ways of being in the world, and to recognise that human and
non-human beings are positioned within shared ecological, social,
cultural and political spaces. With some exceptions, leisure
studies has been slow to embrace the 'animal turn' and consider how
leisure actions, experiences and landscapes are shaped through
multispecies encounters between humans, other animals, birds and
insects, plants and environment. This book begins to address this
gap by presenting research that considers leisure as
more-than-human experiences. The authors consider leisure with
nonhuman others (e.g. dogs, horses), affecting those others (e.g.
environmental concerns) and affected by the non-human (e.g.
landscape, weather), by exploring the 'contact zones' between
humans and other species. Thus, this work contributes to greater
understanding of leisure as a complex, multispecies phenomenon. The
chapters in this book were originally published as a Special Issue
of the Leisure Studies.
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