Tracking does not only generate experiences in the field. It also raises questions. Questions about knowledge, about perception…For this reason, Followly also develops transdisciplinary multimedia articles that explore the practice of tracking through different fields of thought.
These essays bring together perspectives from philosophy, anthropology, ecology and ethology. Rather than treating these disciplines separately, the aim is to let them resonate around a shared question: how do our ways of speaking, observing and imagining shape our relationship with animals and the living world?
This line of inquiry belongs to a small but growing field in the environmental humanities described as ecopoetics, where scientific observation, philosophical reflection and artistic forms meet to explore how humans perceive and narrate the more-than-human world.
These articles combine text, images, video fragments and references, allowing ideas to unfold through multiple media rather than through a single linear argument. These essays, of course, do not aim to establish a definitive theory of tracking, but to enter in dialogue with the broader ecopoetic field, and other embodied practices.