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A01=James Fairhead
A01=Melissa Leach
Animals
Assemblages
Author_James Fairhead
Author_Melissa Leach
Bats
Bees
Biological
Biosemiotics
Category=GTK
Category=JHMC
Category=PDA
Category=PSA
Chickens
Cities
Communicate
Communication
Communicative
Communities
Companions
Companionship
Conversations
Convey
Culture
Dimensions
Ecological
Encounters
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
Everyday
Field
Focus
Food
Forest
Framings
Grammars
Health
Horse
Horses
Human
Instance
Interactions
Interspecies
Land
Landscape
Language
Linguistic
Meanings
Metasigns
Multispecies
Mutual
Narratives
Nature
Naturekind
Pick
Plants
Pluriverse
Practices
Prelinguistic
Relations
Sea
Semiotics
Sensory
Separation
Signals
Significance
Signs
Soil
Sound
Species
Structural
Symbolic
Syntax
Tree
Urban
Water
Whilst
Wider
Worlds

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691270661
  • Weight: 386g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Oct 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A new paradigm that integrates human and nonhuman communication and culture

Are language and culture uniquely human, justifying an exceptionalism that sets people apart from the rest of nature? New discoveries in the biological sciences have challenged this assumption, finding syntax, symbolism and social learning beyond the human, and identifying culture as a second inheritance system across the phyla from whales to insects and plants. Biologists are constrained, however, by the mechanistic ways communication is understood. In Naturekind, Melissa Leach and James Fairhead address this impasse by extending insights from structural linguistics, social semiotics, anthropology and Indigenous theorization into wider life, integrating them with new biological findings to develop a new structural biosemiotics paradigm.

Leach and Fairhead argue that such a paradigm can provide a unified theory of meaning-making across all of nature, or “naturekind,” allowing new theorisation about human and nonhuman communication and culture. They examine people’s communicative encounters with chickens, horses, bees, bats and plants, and with assemblages of living and nonliving entities—forests, seas, soils and cities. Marrying the new biology with the structural social sciences, they contend, provides powerful insights for living well with wider life on a shared planet and transforming political relations.

Melissa Leach is professor of social anthropology at the University of Cambridge and Executive Director of the Cambridge Conservation Initiative (CCI). James Fairhead is professor of social anthropology at the University of Sussex. Leach and Fairhead are the coauthors of Misreading the African Landscape: Society and Ecology in a Forest-Savanna Mosaic; Reframing Deforestation: Global Analyses and Local Realities—Studies in West Africa; Science, Society and Power: Environmental Knowledge and Policy in West Africa and the Caribbean; Vaccine Anxieties: Global Science, Child Health and Society; and other single-authored books.

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