Journal
ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING E-NATURE AND SPACE
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 1601-1621Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/2514848620966502
Keywords
Animal agency; gorilla habituation; Bwindi landscape; conservation; tourism
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Funding
- NUFFIC (the Dutch organisation for internationalisation in education) [PhD.16/0019]
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This paper explores the practice of gorilla habituation using Actor Network Theory and more-than-human geography, highlighting the role of gorillas as actors in habituation, conservation, and tourism development. It argues that gorillas are 'multiple' and actively participate in complex relations with other beings and their environment, co-producing various versions of the landscape and influencing conservation and development practices.
Discussions of gorilla habituation often emphasise human control of gorillas, whereby gorillas are usually singularly defined by their species membership. This perspective leaves little room for imagining the role of gorillas in habituation, conservation and tourism development processes. In this paper, we use insights from Actor Network Theory and more-than-human geography to explore and reconstruct the practice of gorilla habituation in order to understand gorillas as actors in habituation, conservation and tourism development at Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (hereafter Bwindi), Uganda. To do so, we use the concept of relational animal agency to trace the various ways in which gorillas interact with each other, various groups of people, and their environment. Ethnographic observations, unstructured interviews and document study indicate that gorillas are 'multiple' and thus need to be understood beyond their species membership alone. They are involved in intricate relations with each other, with other non-human and human subjects, and their shared environment. Furthermore, gorillas are not completely and passively controlled by humans through habituation: we argue that habituation as a relational process is more complex. Gorillas also habituate other gorillas and arguably can be seen to habituate humans as well. As a result, gorillas co-produce multiple versions of the Bwindi landscape, of conservation, tourism and development practices, as well as multiple ways of being gorillas. Based on these insights, we argue that instead of focusing on control, the dynamics between gorillas and their landscapes could be harnessed to explore a dynamic range of possibilities for living together with gorillas, while continuously adapting to issues that will arise in places such as Bwindi.
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