Sanctuary State: California's Cowscape in Transition

Item

Title
Sanctuary State: California's Cowscape in Transition
Description
Sanctuary State, set in an idealized future in which cows are not exploited for meat or dairy, transforms an 800-acre feedlot into a sanctuary, a healing site for cows. Feedlots, common in California’s San Joaquin Valley, are degraded landscapes that demonstrate fraught human-animal relations that invisiblize, instrumentalize, and condemn domesticated animals. While cows have been implicated in over 10,000 years of domestication, the feedlot-to-sanctuary transformation envisions alternative relationships with animals in a future where transitional interspecies justice is achieved through ecological reparation and animal liberation.

Humans must first dismantle the feedlot to initiate the restoration, in the process confronting the injustices of mass animal production. Infirmaries replace slaughter loading docks, woodlands memorialize cow passings, perennial plantings remediate the damaged soil, and waste accumulates into feral habitat islands that entice cows to meander and forage. Cows and other beings participate as co-designers, revealing the feral sociality of the site’s post-industrial reality. Feral ecologies and self-determining animals, at the sanctuary and the Valley beyond, establish themselves as agents of resistance and growth in the most degraded of places and situations.
Creator
Shen, Rebecca
Subject
Animal rights
Cows
Factory farming
Feedlot
Remediation
Sanctuary
Landscape architecture
Environmental justice
Animal sciences
Contributor
Benedetto, Francesca
Date
2023-05-18T04:13:56Z
2023
2023-05-17
2023-05
2023-05-18T04:13:56Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
application/octet-stream
Identifier
Shen, Rebecca. 2023. Sanctuary State: California's Cowscape in Transition. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
30521618
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37375222
Language
en