Broadly, anti-humanism encompasses a range of different perspectives that all share a critique of humanism and an effort to displace the human subject as the centre of philosophical and social inquiry. Within academic geography, it has ‘primarily taken the form of (1) a travel from the self-containing subject towards subjectivities as relational effects of arrangements or assemblages, and (2) an emphasis on materiality or more broadly the “non-human” or “more-than-human”’ (Simonsen (2013) PHG 37, 1, 10).