ABSTRACT

This chapter expands conceptual vocabularies of place by focussing on struggles that are part of everyday life for racialised Indigenous and ethnic-minority peoples in societies with white majority cultures. I argue that thinking with race, attention to more-than-human forces, and experimenting with digital visual technologies are performative interventions that provide fresh insights into belonging in the Anthropocene. Through collaborative research, place emerges as an ethico-political site of breathing, living and dancing with more-than-human worlds that radiate hope and responsibility.