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Street dogs at the intersection of colonialism and informality: ‘subaltern animism’ as a posthuman critique of Indian cities

journal contribution
posted on 2017-06-01, 00:00 authored by Yamini NarayananYamini Narayanan
This paper argues that colonial biopolitics and informality co-produce a ‘state of exception' for nonhuman animals in cities, based on the socio-political construct of a human/animal binary. This state is enacted by exceptionalising animals as not-persons, and humans as not-animals, and through urbanisation, a uniquely human claim on land. ‘Colonial' is understood in an anthropocentric sense of (privileged) human imperialism over nonhumans and poor humans. Informality, a carefully produced condition that is exceptional to formal governance and planning, legitimises the view of animals (and poor humans) as ‘trespassers' in urban spaces. This paper examines street canines in Indian cities, demonstrating their marginalisation and eviction at the intersection of colonialism and informality. Last, this paper builds upon ‘subaltern urbanism’ that recognises the agency inherent in marginalised citizens and spaces, to conceptualise ‘subaltern animism’ as a way of acknowledging animal spaces and citizenship in the city.

History

Journal

Environment and planning D: society & space

Volume

35

Issue

3

Pagination

475 - 494

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0263-7758

eISSN

1472-3433

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Author(s)

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