
184 pages, 6 x 9
7 b&w illustrations, 4 tables
Paperback
Release Date:21 Oct 2025
ISBN:9780816555666
Hardcover
Release Date:21 Oct 2025
ISBN:9780816555673
A Song for the Horses
Musical Heritage for More-than-Human Futures in Mongolia
By Kip Hutchins
SERIES:
Global Change / Global Health
The University of Arizona Press
As permafrost in Siberia continues to melt and the steppe in the Gobi turns to desert, people in Mongolia are faced with overlapping climate crises. Some nomadic herders describe climate change as the end of a world. They are quick to add that the world has ended before for Indigenous people in North Asia, as waves of colonialism have left the steppe with a complicated web of apocalypses. A Song for the Horses by K. G. Hutchins examines cases in which people respond to the pressures of climate change by drawing on cultural heritage to foster social resiliency.
Hutchins’s ethnographic research, spanning more than a decade, provides a vivid and intimate portrayal of Mongolian life. Musicians use the morin khuur, or ‘horse fiddle,’ to engage with the subjectivities and agencies of nonhuman animals and other beings. This work is a significant contribution to the posthuman turn in social sciences, engaging with theories from prominent scholars such as Donna Haraway and Anna Tsing .
As climate change continues to impact communities worldwide, this book offers a unique perspective on how cultural heritage can be mobilized to address environmental challenges, providing valuable lessons for global efforts to build sustainable and resilient futures. At the intersection of music, environment, and posthumanism, A Song for the Horses shows how Mongolian musicians use cultural traditions to imagine and build toward alternative futures beyond climate change and neoliberalism.
Hutchins’s ethnographic research, spanning more than a decade, provides a vivid and intimate portrayal of Mongolian life. Musicians use the morin khuur, or ‘horse fiddle,’ to engage with the subjectivities and agencies of nonhuman animals and other beings. This work is a significant contribution to the posthuman turn in social sciences, engaging with theories from prominent scholars such as Donna Haraway and Anna Tsing .
As climate change continues to impact communities worldwide, this book offers a unique perspective on how cultural heritage can be mobilized to address environmental challenges, providing valuable lessons for global efforts to build sustainable and resilient futures. At the intersection of music, environment, and posthumanism, A Song for the Horses shows how Mongolian musicians use cultural traditions to imagine and build toward alternative futures beyond climate change and neoliberalism.
Hutchins lyrically presents an ancient musical tradition as it is deployed against drastic environmental and economic changes. This book illustrates the power of music both to cross species boundaries and to draw us toward more hopeful futures.’—John Hartigan Jr., author of Shaving the Beasts: Ritual and Wild Horses in Spain
‘Hutchins’s original research on the role of nonhuman animals in music making lends him an entirely new perspective about the creation of music in Mongolia. He carefully illustrates how horses and camels actively take part in making music.’—Manduhai Buyandelger, author of A Thousand Steps to Parliament: Constructing Electable Women in Mongolia
K. G. Hutchins is a visiting assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Oberlin College. His research focuses on the roles that nonhuman animals, spirits, and other beings in Mongolian and Appalachian musical traditions.