Paula Chambers is an artist, academic and arts educator. She studied with Professor Griselda Pollock at the University of Leeds on the MA Feminist Art History, Theory, Criticism and Practice in the Visual Arts (MAFEM, 1993) and completed her PhD by practice at Middlesex University in 2020. Her research explores the agentic potential of feral objects in their role as sculpture. Specifically, how the disruption of the objects and materials of feminine material culture as feminist art practice, as they perform as sculpture, troubles the historical, social and culture understanding of women's relationship to domesticity. Dawn Woolley is an artist and research fellow at Leeds Arts University. She completed an MA in Photography (2008) and a PhD by project in Fine Art (2017) at the Royal College of Art. Woolley's research examines contemporary consumerism and the commodified construction of gendered bodies, paying particular attention to the new mechanisms of interaction afforded by social networking sites. Recent publications include: ""#Rebel Selves: queer selfies as practices of care"", 'Photographies, 2025 and Consuming the Body: Capitalism, Social Media and Commodification, ' London: Bloomsbury 2025.
This is an important book that adopts speculative methodologies to consider what it might mean to give agency to materials and non-human co-producers of the world in which we live using a wide range of artworks and artmaking as its scoping tools. Speculation is taken up as a feral act in its capacity to resist boundaries of the known and the historically located. Thus, the essays brought together operate and create space between wild and domestic living, crossing back and forth, contaminating one another and their materials. The essays hover between materialism, animism and post-colonial discourses, disrupting and infecting, drawing attention to state of anxiety and increasing inequalities that have become the characteristics of late-capitalist society. The authors collectively offer new ways to think of what it means to be in community with the world as a whole, offering optimistic approaches that are both realisable and realistic. ""Going Feral"" is speculative, and it is agential - this volume gives hope and ambition. Prof. Dr. Catherine Dormor Textile Practices & Feminisms University of Westminster This book responds to the unimagined consequences of imperial, colonial and industrial infrastructures through the boundary art practices of going feral. Grounded in animism and attentive to its cultural and political complexities, it speculates on how to untame and disrupt the European project of expansion. An invaluable multidirectional guide for readers interested in more-than-human entanglements and the potential futures they materialise. Dr. Basia Sliwinska Researcher Art History Institute (IHA), Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal ""Going feral: Speculative approaches to animism in the arts"" provides an impactful art theoretical framework with key case studies to further the important intellectual work of debunking dualistic, anthropocentric thinking and carving space for pluralistic understandings of our post-humanist existence. Through the biological and intellectual concepts of ferality and animism, the co-editors produce a nuanced, yet radical framework that pushes past binary-based thinking and brings contemporary conceptualization, including feminist thought, queer theory, post-humanism and performance, into new territories. Through key essays that engage boundary-pushing art and conceptual practices, important voices in the materialist, decolonial and resistance movements of international scope are brought together into one volume. The cross-disciplinary scope of this text, while grounded in contemporary art practices and research, provides imaginative and speculative methodologies to foster meaningful relationships in our precarious and uncharted future through criticality, care and consideration. Prof. Diana Heise Kansas City Art Institute