Living with and Learning From Bed Bugs

New York and New Forms of Interspecies Sociability

Authors

  • Jamie Berthe Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71743/8b8czf71

Keywords:

Multispecies ethnography, bed bugs, interspecies sociability, parasites, multispecies love

Abstract

This essay uses the subjective experience of a bed bug infestation as the starting point for thinking through the nature of parasitic relationships.  Calling on recent literatures in mulit- and inter-species ethnography, the author asks the following question: if, as Anna Tsing has argued, a new kind of science is being born, one whose key characteristic is “multispecies love,” can we, as individuals, and as social beings, learn to love bed bugs?

Preparing our apartment for the first treatment – all of our belongings had to be placed in plastic bags until they could be treated with heat or discarded. © Jamie Berthe (2010)

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Published

2013-04-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Berthe, J. (2013). Living with and Learning From Bed Bugs: New York and New Forms of Interspecies Sociability. Semiotic Review, 1. https://doi.org/10.71743/8b8czf71