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Trophy Hunters & Crazy Cat Ladies: exploring cats and conservation in North America and Southern Africa through intersectionality

By Sandra G. McCubbin, Lauren E. Van Patter

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Abstract

What explains the silencing, dismissal, disavowal, ridicule, and stigmatizing of care for individual animals observed in conservation discourses? We examine this question using a comparative case study of feral cat management in North America and lion conservation in southern Africa. We apply intersectionality to illustrate the ways in which hierarchies of scale (individual/population), knowledge (emotion/reason), and gender (feminine/masculine) marginalize concern for individual animals, with consequences for the lives of animals and those who care for them. We explore the embodiment of these intersecting hierarchies in two contrasting, yet entangled, figures – the othered Crazy Cat Lady and the privileged Trophy Hunter – which serve to illustrate how mainstream conservation discourses position care for animals as feminine and emotional, while privileging a very different human-animal relationship based in masculine, rational concern for species. Overall, we contribute to efforts in feminist more-than-human scholarship by: extending intersectional analysis to empirical cases of animal conservation and management where it has had limited application; applying intersectionality to manifestations of social power other than categories of identity by considering gender alongside hierarchies of scale and knowledge; and, examining both othered and privileged identity formation by employing a comparative case study approach. We conclude by highlighting alternate ontologies which hold promise for fostering more equitable, less hierarchical visions of multispecies flourishing which avow care for individual animals.

Date 2020
Publication Title Gender, Place and Culture
Volume 28
Issue 9
Pages 719-742
ISBN/ISSN 0966369X
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
DOI 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1791802
Author Address Department of Geography and Planning, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada ; Department of Geography and Planning, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Additional Language English
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Tags
  1. Animals
  2. Case Report
  3. Comparisons
  4. Conservation
  5. Discourse
  6. Embodiment
  7. Feminism
  8. Gender
  9. Hierarchy
  10. identity
  11. intersectionality
  12. Knowledge
  13. Masculinity
  14. North America
  15. Scales
  16. stigma
  17. Women