Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation
Terada Honke is a natural sake brewery that utilizes practices like call-and-response and work song to coordinate its fermentation processes across human and microbial participants. I call attention to the concept of attunement, which is the ability to notice, apprehend, and connect with others in...
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University of Western Ontario
2021-09-01
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doaj-c084f8394f2143e2ac41afcebbda2a7e2021-09-10T21:58:16ZengUniversity of Western OntarioFeminist Philosophy Quarterly2371-25702021-09-0173Attunement and Multispecies Communication in FermentationMaya Hey0Concordia University Terada Honke is a natural sake brewery that utilizes practices like call-and-response and work song to coordinate its fermentation processes across human and microbial participants. I call attention to the concept of attunement, which is the ability to notice, apprehend, and connect with others in meaningful response. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, I explain why brewers must attune to the social, spatial, and temporal scales of life within the brewhouse, including the microbes who remain invisible to the brewers. I then analyze how the brewers practice attunement by attending to the relations between (inter-), within (intra-), and outside of (extra-) their bodies. These practices enable brewers to practice an embodied relationality that spans multiple scales and multiple species, or what others have called response-ability. I argue that this form of attunement could extend the idea of collective ethics to include microbial others and help rewrite the metaphysics of what it means to be human. https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/fpq/article/view/10846fermentationattunementmultispecies communicationembodied relationalitymultiscalar ethicshuman-microbe relationship |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Maya Hey |
spellingShingle |
Maya Hey Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation Feminist Philosophy Quarterly fermentation attunement multispecies communication embodied relationality multiscalar ethics human-microbe relationship |
author_facet |
Maya Hey |
author_sort |
Maya Hey |
title |
Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation |
title_short |
Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation |
title_full |
Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation |
title_fullStr |
Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Attunement and Multispecies Communication in Fermentation |
title_sort |
attunement and multispecies communication in fermentation |
publisher |
University of Western Ontario |
series |
Feminist Philosophy Quarterly |
issn |
2371-2570 |
publishDate |
2021-09-01 |
description |
Terada Honke is a natural sake brewery that utilizes practices like call-and-response and work song to coordinate its fermentation processes across human and microbial participants. I call attention to the concept of attunement, which is the ability to notice, apprehend, and connect with others in meaningful response. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, I explain why brewers must attune to the social, spatial, and temporal scales of life within the brewhouse, including the microbes who remain invisible to the brewers. I then analyze how the brewers practice attunement by attending to the relations between (inter-), within (intra-), and outside of (extra-) their bodies. These practices enable brewers to practice an embodied relationality that spans multiple scales and multiple species, or what others have called response-ability. I argue that this form of attunement could extend the idea of collective ethics to include microbial others and help rewrite the metaphysics of what it means to be human.
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topic |
fermentation attunement multispecies communication embodied relationality multiscalar ethics human-microbe relationship |
url |
https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/fpq/article/view/10846 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT mayahey attunementandmultispeciescommunicationinfermentation |
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