Bad Nature

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A01=Andrew McCumber
Alberta
Animal rights
Animal studies
Anthropocentrism
Anthropology
Author_Andrew McCumber
Biodiversity
Biopolitics
Category=JBSD
Category=JHBA
Category=WNCF
Coexistence
Conservation
Cultural attitudes
Ecocriticism
Ecological ethics
Environmental ethics
Environmental justice
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnography
Extermination
Galapagos
Human exceptionalism
Human-animal relationships
Human-nonhuman relations
Human-wildlife conflict
Interspecies dynamics
Los Angeles
Multispecies ethnography
Pest control
Pest management
Posthumanism
Power structures
Rodents
Social inequality
Species hierarchy
Speciesism
Sustainability
Urban ecology
Urban fauna
Urban planning
Vermin
Zoopolitics

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226838984
  • Weight: 227g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Offers insights into the social and cultural implications of humans’ relationships with rats and the natural world.
 
Apart from the occasional pet owner who has rats, most people regard rats as disease-carrying nocturnal pests, scurrying around dumpsters and dragging slices of pizza through New York City subways. Since rats are seemingly omnipresent in human life, why do we harbor such negative feelings about them, and why are they among the creatures most frequently targeted for systematic extermination?

In Bad Nature, sociologist Andrew McCumber draws out the cultural underpinnings of rat extermination across three countries and two continents. Drawing from ethnographic, interview, and textual data from the frigid prairie of Alberta, Canada; the heart of downtown Los Angeles, California; and the iconic Galápagos Islands of Ecuador, McCumber studies how humans have sought to suppress and exterminate rat populations in a variety of environmental, social, and political situations. He shows how, in these disparate locations, rat control is a social practice that draws and clarifies the spatial and symbolic boundaries between “good” and “bad” forms of nature. Rats are near the bottom of a symbolic hierarchy of species that places human life at the top, companion animals and majestic wildlife just below them, and the “invasive species” that call for systematic extermination at the very bottom. This hierarchy of living things that places rats at the bottom, McCumber argues, mirrors human systems of social inequalities and power dynamics.  

Both original and engaging, Bad Nature urges readers to consider, when charting a just and sustainable future, where will the rats be placed in the worlds we envision?
 
Andrew McCumber is assistant professor of sociology at Virginia Tech University. His research on cultural meaning and nature has previously been published in journals including Sociological Forum, Cultural Sociology, and Poetics, along with interdisciplinary outlets such as Environmental Humanities and Nature + Culture.
 

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