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How to Love a Rat

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How to Love a Rat takes place in a Cambodian minefield. Working amid hidden bombs, former war combatants use explosive-sniffing rats to clear mines from the land. In total, an estimated four to six...
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  • 10 September 2024
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How to Love a Rat takes place in a Cambodian minefield. Working amid hidden bombs, former war combatants use explosive-sniffing rats to clear mines from the land. In total, an estimated four to six million landmines in Cambodia have been left behind by wars that ended decades ago. This has created the conditions for a flourishing mine-clearance industry, where workers who were once enemy combatants may now be employed on the same clearance teams.

Zeroing in on two distinct sets of feelings, Darcie DeAngelo paints a portrait of the love experienced between humans and rats and the suspicions felt between former adversaries turned coworkers. In doing so, she points to how human-animal relationships in the minefield produce models for relationality among people from opposing sides of war. The ways the deminers love the rats mediate both the traumatic violence of the past and the uncertain dangers of the minefield. The book's stories depict an transformative postwar ecology emerging through human-nonhuman relationships, including those shared between humans and rats, landmines, and spirits.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 196
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: Atelier: Ethnographic Inquiry in the Twenty-First Century
Publication Date: 10 September 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520397422
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

 “This book is deeply ethnographic, suitable for students and scholars interested in issues of military waste, human–non-human relationships, the aftermath of the Cambodian conflicts, Khmer culture and linguistics, as well as Southeast Asia's different ontologies.”
 


— Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale
Darcie DeAngelo is an anthropologist, writer, and filmmaker. She explores the unexpected relations between humans and nonhumans amid war and other environmental disasters.
Contents

Acknowledgments 
Notes on the Language 

1. New Choreographies 
2. Shadow Stories 
3. Even the Clouds Lie 
4. A Murder 
5. Metta Means “I’m Sorry, You’re Sorry” 
6. Smell (Like) a Rat 

Notes 
References 
Index