Wild Dog Dreaming: Love and Extinction

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University of Virginia Press, Mar 4, 2011 - Literary Criticism - 168 pages

We are living in the midst of the Earth's sixth great extinction event, the first one caused by a single species: our own. In Wild Dog Dreaming, Deborah Bird Rose explores what constitutes an ethical relationship with nonhuman others in this era of loss. She asks, Who are we, as a species? How do we fit into the Earth's systems? Amidst so much change, how do we find our way into new stories to guide us? Rose explores these questions in the form of a dialogue between science and the humanities. Drawing on her conversations with Aboriginal people, for whom questions of extinction are up-close and very personal, Rose develops a mode of exposition that is dialogical, philosophical, and open-ended.

An inspiration for Rose--and a touchstone throughout her book--is the endangered dingo of Australia. The dingo is not the first animal to face extinction, but its story is particularly disturbing because the threat to its future is being actively engineered by humans. The brazenness with which the dingo is being wiped out sheds valuable, and chilling, light on the likely fate of countless other animal and plant species.

"People save what they love," observed Michael Soulé, the great conservation biologist. We must ask whether we, as humans, are capable of loving--and therefore capable of caring for--the animals and plants that are disappearing in a cascade of extinctions. Wild Dog Dreaming engages this question, and the result is a bold account of the entangled ethics of love, contingency, and desire.

 

Contents

1 Where Shall Wisdom Be Found?
1
2 Looking into Extinction
17
3 Bobbys Face My Love
29
4 Ecological Existentialism
42
5 Orions Dog
52
6 Singing Up the Others
59
7 Jobs Grief
71
8 What If the Angel of History Were a Dog?
81
9 Ruined Faces
97
10 WorldCrazy
108
11 Solomons Wisdom
119
12 The Beginning Law
132
Notes
147
Bibliography
157
Index
165
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About the author (2011)

Deborah Bird Rose, Adjunct Professor in Environmental Humanities at the University of New South Wales, is the author of Reports from a Wild Country: Ethics for Decolonisation and Dingo Makes Us Human: Life and Land in an Australian Aboriginal Culture.