Seeing with a Forager’s Eye: A Conversation with Martin Saxer

Authors

  • Martin Saxer Rachel Carson Center
  • Christof Mauch Rachel Carson Center

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5282/rcc-springs-7046

Abstract

This article features a conversation between RCC Director Christof Mauch and filmmaker and anthropologist Martin Saxer about practices of collecting and scavenging across the world. Saxer leads the research project “Foraging at the Edge of Capitalism,” based at the Rachel Carson Center (RCC). Here, he elaborates on how foraging is not just a means of subsistence but also a way of seeing and engaging with the environment that contrasts with modern, commodity-driven perspectives. He emphasizes the knowledge systems embedded in foraging practices, which foster a deep connection to the land.

Author Biographies

  • Martin Saxer, Rachel Carson Center

    Martin Saxer is a social anthropologist and filmmaker. He obtained his PhD from the University of Oxford and has carried out postdoctoral research at the Asia Research Institute in Singapore. In 2013, he was awarded a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship by the EU, and in 2015, he received a five-year ERC Starting Grant for the project “Remoteness and Connectivity: Highland Asia in the World.” He has been affiliated with the RCC since 2021. His current project is funded by an ERC Consolidator Grant (2022–2026) and explores foraging on the fuzzy fringes of capitalism.

  • Christof Mauch, Rachel Carson Center

    Christof Mauch is director of the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society as well as chair of American culture and transatlantic relations at LMU Munich. He is also an affiliated professor in the history faculty of LMU Munich and an honorary professor and honorary fellow at the Center for Ecological History at Renmin University of China.

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Published

13-06-2024

Issue

Section

Articles