Prof. Dr. Marie Muschalek Department of History Profiles & Affiliations OverviewResearch Publications Projects & Collaborations Projects & Collaborations OverviewResearch Publications Projects & Collaborations Profiles & Affiliations Projects & Collaborations 1 foundShow per page10 10 20 50 Killing to Keep: Violent Field Practices and Imperial Natural History in the Long Nineteenth-Century Research Project | 1 Project MembersAs the consequences of the Anthropocene become one of the most pressing political issues of our time, humans are beginning to grapple with their destructive relationship to nonhuman life. What does it mean, for example, to kill animals in order to study them? A historical exploration of violent humanistic knowledge practices in the age of Empire. 1 1 OverviewResearch Publications Projects & Collaborations
Projects & Collaborations 1 foundShow per page10 10 20 50 Killing to Keep: Violent Field Practices and Imperial Natural History in the Long Nineteenth-Century Research Project | 1 Project MembersAs the consequences of the Anthropocene become one of the most pressing political issues of our time, humans are beginning to grapple with their destructive relationship to nonhuman life. What does it mean, for example, to kill animals in order to study them? A historical exploration of violent humanistic knowledge practices in the age of Empire. 1 1
Killing to Keep: Violent Field Practices and Imperial Natural History in the Long Nineteenth-Century Research Project | 1 Project MembersAs the consequences of the Anthropocene become one of the most pressing political issues of our time, humans are beginning to grapple with their destructive relationship to nonhuman life. What does it mean, for example, to kill animals in order to study them? A historical exploration of violent humanistic knowledge practices in the age of Empire.