Impersonating Animals

Impersonating Animals
Title Impersonating Animals PDF eBook
Author S. Marek Muller
Publisher MSU Press
Total Pages 315
Release 2020-08-01
Genre Nature
ISBN 1628954027

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In 2011, in one sign of a burgeoning interest in the morality of human interactions with nonhuman animals, a panel hosted by the American Association for the Advancement of Science declared that dolphins and orcas should be legally regarded as persons. Multiple law schools now offer classes in animal law and have animal law clinics, placing their students with a growing range of animal rights and animal welfare advocacy organizations. But is legal personhood the best means to achieving total interspecies liberation? To answer that question, Impersonating Animals evaluates the rhetoric of animal rights activists Steven Wise and Gary Francione, as well as the Earth jurisprudence paradigm. Deploying a critical ecofeminist stance sensitive to the interweaving of ideas about race, gender, class, sexuality, ability, and species, author S. Marek Muller places animal rights rhetoric in the context of discourses in which some humans have been deemed more animal than others and some animals have been deemed more human than others. In bringing rhetoric and animal studies together, she shows that how we communicate about nonhuman beings necessarily affects relationships across species boundaries and among people. This book also highlights how animal studies scholars and activists can and should use ideological rhetorical criticism to investigate the implications of their tactics and strategies, emphasizing a critical vegan rhetoric as the best means of achieving liberation for human and nonhuman animals alike.

Pretending and Imagination in Animals and Children

Pretending and Imagination in Animals and Children
Title Pretending and Imagination in Animals and Children PDF eBook
Author Robert W. Mitchell
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 390
Release 2002-02-21
Genre Science
ISBN 1139439448

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It is well known that children's activities are full of pretending and imagination, but it is less appreciated that animals can also show similar activities. Originally published in 2002, this book focuses on comparing and contrasting children's and animals' pretenses and imaginative activities. In the text, overviews of research present conflicting interpretations of children's understanding of the psychology of pretense, and describe sociocultural factors which influence children's pretenses. Studies of nonhuman primates provide examples of their pretenses and other simulative activities, explore their representational and imaginative capacities and compare their skills with children. Although the psychological requirements for pretending are controversial, evidence presented in this volume suggests that great apes and even monkeys may share capacities for imagination with children, and that children's early pretenses may be less psychological than they appear.

The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals

The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals
Title The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals PDF eBook
Author Chloë Taylor
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 884
Release 2024-05-31
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1040005888

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The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals is a diverse and intersectional collection which examines human and more-than-human animal relations, as well as the interconnectedness of human and animal oppressions through various lenses. Comprising fifty chapters, the book explores a range of debates and scholarship within important contemporary topics such as companion animals, hunting, agriculture, and animal activist strategies. It also offers timely analyses of zoonotic disease pandemics, mass extinction, and the climate catastrophe, using perspectives including feminist, critical race, anti-colonial, critical disability, and masculinities studies. The Routledge Companion to Gender and Animals is an essential reference for students in gender studies, sexuality studies, human-animal studies, cultural studies, sociology, and environmental studies.

Animals in Irish Literature and Culture

Animals in Irish Literature and Culture
Title Animals in Irish Literature and Culture PDF eBook
Author Kathryn Kirkpatrick
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 270
Release 2016-01-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1137434805

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Animals in Irish Literature and Culture spans the early modern period to the present, exploring colonial, post-colonial, and globalized manifestations of Ireland as country and state as well as the human animal and non-human animal migrations that challenge a variety of literal and cultural borders.

Feminist Animal Studies

Feminist Animal Studies
Title Feminist Animal Studies PDF eBook
Author Erika Cudworth
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 267
Release 2022-12-30
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1000829952

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This book explores human–animal relations and species-based domination at the intersection of feminism with critique of our domination and exploitation of nonhuman animals, in conversation with power dynamics around coloniality and race, class, sexuality and embodiment. The collection demonstrates the continued vital importance of feminism – conceptually and theoretically, methodologically and politically – to the development of animal studies. Feminism has made an incisive critique of the ways in which gender and other intersecting differences and inequalities are constitutive of our destructive, exploitative and often violent relationships with nonhuman worlds. An international group of scholars and activists showcase new work, revisiting and extending established debates while negotiating new paths. Amongst the issues addressed in this collection will be questions of animal being and animal rights, caring relations, the relationships between activism and theory, interspecies sexual violence, tension in the animal defence movement around body politics, gender politics and professionalisation, different spaces of gender and animal relations from social media to sexology, safe spaces and sanctuaries, spaces of home – both in times of ‘business-as-usual’ and in times of lockdown. This multidisciplinary volume will be essential reading to students and academics working in the fields of cultural studies, criminology, geography, history, law, philosophy, politics and sociology, with interest in gender, environmentalism and animal studies. The editors work in the School of Applied Social Sciences at De Montfort University, Leicester, UK, and share interests in gender and species violence, environmental harms, social justice matters and intersected inequalities.

Human Animals

Human Animals
Title Human Animals PDF eBook
Author Frank Hamel
Publisher
Total Pages 330
Release 1915
Genre Animals
ISBN

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Applied Cartooning

Applied Cartooning
Title Applied Cartooning PDF eBook
Author Art Instruction, Inc. (Minneapolis, Minn.)
Publisher
Total Pages 68
Release 1919
Genre Caricature
ISBN

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