A Translocal Perspective: Mustang Images in the Cultural, Economic and Political Landscape

Animals (Basel). 2010 Dec 14;1(1):27-39. doi: 10.3390/ani1010027.

Abstract

Translocal spaces are created out of the process of globalization whereby interventions such as electronic media and migration radically change social relations and breakdown the isomorphism of space, place, and culture [1]. This approach is useful in examining the controversy surrounding the mustang. This paper explores how different social constructions influence the management of mustangs as they move between the local and national level. At each cultural level, political, economic, and environmental issues converge encouraging the emphasis of some cultural constructions over others. These socially constructed images give insight into what the mustang means to a post-industrial culture and it may simultaneously contribute to the animal's eventual demise.

Keywords: horses; mustangs; social constructions of horses; translocality.