Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
The ethnographic effort of grasping the multiplicity of nature even where mononaturalism should be produced has already pointed out how we cannot think about nature as unitary when we consider the practices that enact it. Using fieldwork with earthworm scientists and ethnographic experiments with vermicomposting, I will offer a specific set of such multiplicity. Considering the earthworms and the togetherness that practices can afford us (worms and humans, and all sort of others), I will then try to offer a tentative answer (and, yet again, a number of new questions) to the question often voiced by those who are faced with such multiplicity: so what?