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Urbanization's mediator: Reassembling rural tibetan lives through pig breed changes

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Abstract

This is a study of the reasons underlying the disappearance of a local Tibetan pig breed, as well as pigs’ role in driving urbanization. It is based on immersive participant observation in a Tibetan village in Sichuan, China. Villagers’ transition from raising local Tibetan pigs to hybrid breeds has detached pigs from households due to a decline in pig rearing duration. Simultaneously, as pigs had previously played a crucial role in connecting humans to the land, the change in pig breeds also led to a loosening in the relationship between humans and the land, stimulating population mobility and liberating time and labor for villagers to engage in urbanization. The change in pig breed has led to the continual reorganization of human life in response to urbanization, a process that involves not only human participation but also the agency of various non-human actors. Through reexamining the concept of urbanization through changes in human-nonhuman relationships, this paper speaks to the material turn in anthropology, which has provided a new theoretical perspective for the study of urbanization in China.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104262
JournalGeoforum
Volume161
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Keywords

  • Animal-human relations
  • China
  • Land
  • Pigs
  • Tibetans
  • Urbanization

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Sociology and Political Science

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