“…Nevertheless, for a growing number of animal geographers and other social scientists (for farm animals, Buller, 2012bBuller, , 2013aHolloway and Morris, 2014;Johnston, 2013;Porcher and Lécrivain, 2012;Roe and Greenhough, 2014;for fish, Bear and Eden, 2011;Bull, 2011), they offer distinctively visceral, performative and affective opportunities for exploring co-presence and mutual becoming. Many such studies incorporate the intermediating role of technological and scientific dispositifs in the nature-techno-culture assemblies that characterize the modern farm (for example, Higgin et al, 2011;Holloway and Morris, 2012;Holloway et al, 2013;Law and Lien, 2013). Others (e.g.…”