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Unruly grasses: Affective attunements in the ecological restoration of urban native grasslands in Australia
Institution:1. Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-2258, USA;2. Texas A&M Natural Resources Institute, College Station, TX 77843, USA;3. East Foundation, San Antonio, TX 78216, USA;1. Institut Català de Recerca de l''Aigua (ICRA), Carrer Emili Grahit 101, 17003 Girona, Spain;2. Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU), Department of Geography, Luisenstr. 27, 80333 München, Germany;3. Institut d''Estudis Aquàtics, Universitat de Girona (UdG), Campus de Montilivi, 17071 Girona, Spain
Abstract:This paper explores affect as an ‘angle of approach’ for re/considering the work of ecological restoration in urban spaces. My focus is on the more-than-human affective dimensions of the reintroduction of native grasses in Melbourne's (Australia) urban parklands. Sara Ahmed suggests that ‘affect is what sticks or sustains or preserves the connection between ideas, values and objects’ (2010, 29), and here I extend this notion to think about the restoration of grasslands not as primarily material transformations (to which we might react), but as the recomposition of the 'ideas, values and objects' that constitute urban park naturecultures. The paper highlights the role of affective relations in the inheritance of landscapes that do not attract widespread positive affection. It employs Sara Ahmed's concept of the affect alien as a figure of nonconformity, to uncover how the affective resonances of grasslands might open new possibilities for attuning to the complex and multiple naturecultures of postcolonial lands.
Keywords:Affect  Inheritance  More-than-human geographies  Human–plant relations  Urban grasslands  Ecological restoration
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