James Looney
Ph.D. Candidate (ABD), Geography, University of Kentucky
Graduate Certificate in Social Theory, University of Kentucky, 2008
M.A., Sociology, the Maxwell School, Syracuse University, 2006
B.A., College Scholars with emphases in Ecology and Environmental Studies, 1995
I use qualitative methods to explore landscapes of conservation and preservation in pratice. To witness these vital spaces, I pay attention to the interacting cultures of nature, lived architectures, felt geographies, and myriad human/animal/plant encounters that gather together to compose unique ecologies of place and landscape. I am particularly interested in the emotional allegiances, ethical stances, and spatial practices that human beings direct towards endangered species, threatened ecosystems, and vulnerable architectures –– especially those that are afforded some degree of protection in Terrestrial/Marine/Coastal Protected Areas, tourism destinations, and historic districts. My dissertation (in progress) is the product of fieldwork on Ocracoke Island and in the Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina’s Outer Banks; this project uses a series of ethnographic vignettes to describe the representational and affective maneuvers involved in the territorialization of particular regimes for protecting animals, plants, places, cultural histories, and heritage architectures.
Looney, James and Karen Kinslow (eds.). 2009. disClosure: a journal of social theory. Special Issue: WAR.
Looney, James and Karen Kinslow. 2009. Editors’ Preface. disClosure: a journal of social theory 18: 2-5. Special Issue: WAR.