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Animal Subjects: An Ethical Reader in a Posthuman World: Environmental Humanities

Autor Jodey Castricano
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 apr 2017
Although Cultural Studies has directed sustained attacks against sexism and racism, the question of the animal has lagged behind developments in broader society with regard to animal suffering in factory farming, product testing, and laboratory experimentation, as well in zoos, rodeos, circuses, and public aquariums. The contributors to Animal Subjects are scholars and writers from diverse perspectives whose work calls into question the boundaries that divide the animal kingdom from humanity, focusing on the medical, biological, cultural, philosophical, and ethical concerns between non-human animals and ourselves. The first of its kind to feature the work of Canadian scholars and writers in this emergent field, this collection aims to include the non-human-animal question as part of the ethical purview of Cultural Studies and to explore the question in interdisciplinary terms.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780889205123
ISBN-10: 0889205124
Pagini: 324
Ilustrații: b/w illus
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Wilfrid Laurier University Pre
Colecția Wilfrid Laurier University Press (CA)
Seria Environmental Humanities


Cuprins

Table of Contents for Animal Subjects: An Ethical Reader edited by Jodey Castricano

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Animal Subjects in a Posthuman World | Jodey Castricano

Chicken | Donna Haraway

Selfish Genes, Sociobiology, and Animal Respect | Rod Preece

Anatomy as Speech Act: Vesalius, Descartes, Rembrandt, or "The Question" of "the animal" in the Early Modern Anatomy Lesson | Dawne McCance

A Missed Opportunity: Humanism, Anti-humanism, and the Animal Question | Paola Cavalieri

Thinking Other-Wise: Cognitive Science, Deconstruction, and the (Non)Speaking (Non)Human Animal Subject | Cary Wolfe

Animals in Moral Space | Michael Allen Fox and Lesley McLean

Electric Sheep and the New Argument from Nature | Angus Taylor

Monsters: The Case of Marineland | John Sorenson

"I sympathize in their pains and pleasures": Women and Animals in Mary Wollstonecraft | Barbara K. Seeber

Animals as Persons | David Sztybel

Power and Irony: One Tortured Cat and Many Twisted Angles to Our Moral Schizophrenia about Animals | Lesli Bisgould

Blame and Shame: Animal Experimentation | Anne Innis Dagg

On Animal Immortality: An Argument for the Possibility of Animal Immortality in Light of the History of Philosophy | Johanna Tito

Contributors

Index

Contributors

Lesli Bisgould has worked as a lawyer in Ontario since 1992. She practised civil litigation at a Toronto boutique firm before establishing her own practice in animal rights law in 1995. Bisgould was Canada's only animal rights lawyer for ten years. Currently she is Legal Aid Ontario's Barrister in Residence, assisting legal clinics in their work on behalf of Ontarios poorest residents.

Jodey Castricano is an Associate Professor in the Department of Critical Studies at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan, where she teaches critical theory and Cultural Studies. Her interests lie in posthumanism and animal studies, and she has also published on the philosopher Jacques Derrida and is working on an SSHRC-supported book-length study, under contract with the University of Wales Press, on the influence of 19th-century spiritualism on the rise and practice of psychoanalysis. Recently she was appointed as a Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics in the UK.

Paola Cavalieri, whose research interests include ethics, bioethics and political philosophy, is the editor of the international philosophy journal Etica & Animali. She is the co-editor, with Peter Singer, of The Great Ape Project (London: Fourth Estate, 1993) and the author of The Animal Question (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001).

Biologist Anne Innis Dagg, PhD, teaches in the Independent Studies program of the University of Waterloo. Her academic research articles and books have focused on mammals (especially giraffe and camels), feminism (particularly as it affects academic women), evolutionary psychology and, most recently, animal rights. Her most recent publications include The Feminine Gaze, Love of Shopping Is Not a Gene and Pursuing Giraffe.

Michael Allen Fox is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, Queens University, and Adjunct Professor of Social Science, University of New England (Australia). He has written, lectured and consulted extensively on animal ethics issues and is the author of The Case for Animal Experimentation, Deep Vegetarianism and The Accessible Hegel. His current writing project is A Student's Guide to Existentialism. He lives in Armidale, New South Wales, Australia.

Donna Haraway earned a PhD from the Biology Department at Yale in 1972 for an interdisciplinary dissertation on the functions of metaphor in shaping research in developmental biology in the twentieth century. She is now professor and former chair of the History of Consciousness Program at University of California, Santa Cruz. Her many publications include The Companion Species Manifesto: Dogs, People, and Significant Otherness, Primate Visions: Gender, Race, and Nature in the World of Modern Science and the highly influential Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature.

Dawne McCance is Professor and Head, Department of Religion, University of Manitoba, and Editor of Mosaic: a journal for the interdisciplinary study of literature. Her book, Medusa's Ear: University foundings from Kant to Chora L (2004), approaches the conflation of "animal" and "woman" (deaf and mute female) in founding texts on the modern research university. She is currently extending this study in a book-length project supported by sshrc, A Little History of Hearing.

Lesley McLean has recently completed her PhD at the University of New England, Armidale (Australia). Her thesis is entitled "How Should One Live with Nonhuman Animals? An examination of the ways three philosophers have answered this question." Her research interests centre on notions of moral and imaginative attention with respect to nonhuman animals.

Rod Preece is Professor Emeritus at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario, and is the author of numerous volumes, including Animals and Nature: Cultural Myths, Cultural Realities (1999), Awe for the Tiger, Love for the Lamb: A Chronicle of Sensibility to Animals (2002) and Brute Souls, Happy Beasts and Evolution: The Historical Status of Animals (2005).

Barbara K. Seeber is an Associate Professor of English at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario, specializing in eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century literature. She is the author of General Consent in Jane Austen: A Study of Dialogism(2000).

John Sorenson is a professor in the Department of Sociology at Brock University. His books include Culture of Prejudice; Ghosts and Shadows; Imaging Ethiopia and Disaster and Development in the Horn of Africa. He is currently working on a study of various representations of animals supported by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

David Sztybel completed his doctorate at the University of Toronto, Ontario, and also an Advisory Research Committee Post-Doctoral Fellowship, centring on the ethics of vivisection, at Queens University, Ontario. A Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics, he is an advocate for animal rights, human rights and the environment. He instructs mainly in Critical Animal Studies at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario.

Angus Taylor is the author of Animals and Ethics: An Overview of the Philosophical Debate. He teaches philosophy at the University of Victoria. Once upon a time he worked in Toronto at the Spaced Out Library (now the Merril Collection), and wrote Philip K. Dick and the Umbrella of Light, one of the first extended critical essays on Dick's work.

Johanna Tito was born in the Netherlands and received her early education there. She did undergraduate work in philosophy and psychology at York University and received her MA and PhD in philosophy from McMaster University. She works in the area of phenomenology and is the author of Logic in the Husserlian Context.

Cary Wolfe has taught at Indiana, SUNY (Albany), and at Rice, where he currently holds the Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie Chair in English. He has published widely on US culture and critical theory in Diacritics, boundary 2, New Literary History, Cultural Critique, New German Critique, and many others, and is the author of three books and two edited collections. His book Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory (Chicago, 2003) was nominated for the MLA's James Russell Lowell Prize, and the edited collection Zoontologies: The Question of the Animal (Minnesota) also appeared in 2003. His collection The Other Emerson (co-edited with Branka Arsic) is forthcoming from Fordham University Press in 2008, and he is currently completing a book called What Is Posthumanism?