“…Research on agricultural resilience has, to date, largely focused on economic and policy implications and mechanisms (Hammond et al, 2013;Maleksaeidi and Karami, 2013;Ranjan, 2014) or agro-ecological management (Björklund et al, 2012;Lin, 2011), which often fails to take account of the embodied and immersive nature of farming as a lifestyle and livelihood. However, there is a wealth of rural sociology, geography and anthropology exploring the socio-cultures of agriculture, which is increasingly being drawn on to explicitly focus on social resilience, for example through mental health (Alston, 2012;Greenhill et al, 2009;Hunt et al, 2011), farm conversion and succession (Forney and Stock, 2014), transformational capacity (Marshall et al, 2012) and ANT (Dwiartama and Rosin, 2014).…”