Unruly Raccoons and Troubled Educators: Nature/Culture Divides in a Childcare Centre

  • Pacini-Ketchabaw V
  • Nxumalo F
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Abstract

Current times of anthropogenically damaged landscapes call us to re-think human and nonhuman relations and consider multiple possibilities for alternative and more sustainable futures. As many environmental and Indigenous humanities scholars have noted, central to this re-thinking is unsettling the colonial nature/culture divide in Western epistemology. In this article, through a series of situated, small, everyday stories from childcare centres, we relate raccoon-child-educator encounters in order to consider how raccoons' repeated boundary-crossing and their apprehension as unruly subjects might reveal the impossibility of the nature/culture divide. We tell these stories, not to offer a final fixed solution to the asymmetrical, awkward and frictional entanglements of humans' and raccoons' lives, but as a responsive telling that may bring forth new possibilities for responsible, affective and ethical co-habitations.

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Pacini-Ketchabaw, V., & Nxumalo, F. (2016). Unruly Raccoons and Troubled Educators: Nature/Culture Divides in a Childcare Centre. Environmental Humanities, 7(1), 151–168. https://doi.org/10.1215/22011919-3616380

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