Fr. 250.00

Oxford Handbook of Animal Studies

English · Hardback

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Description

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Intellectual struggles with the "animal question"-- how humans can rethink and reconfigure their relationships with other animals-- first began to take hold in the 1970s. Over the next forty years, scholars from a wide range of fields would make sweeping reevaluations of the relationship between humans and other animals.

The Oxford Handbook of Animal Studies brings these diverse evaluations together for the first time, paying special attention to the commodification of animals, the degradation of the natural world and a staggering loss of animal habitat and species extinction, and the increasing need for humans to coexist with other animals in urban, rural and natural contexts. Linda Kalof maps these themes into the five major categories that structure this volume: Animals in the Landscape of Law, Politics and Public Policy; Animal Intentionality, Agency and Reflexive Thinking; Animals as Objects in Science, Food, Spectacle and Sport; Animals in Cultural Representations; and Animals in Ecosystems. Written by international scholars with backgrounds in philosophy, law, history, English, art, sociology, geography, archaeology, environmental studies, cultural studies, and animal advocacy, the thirty chapters in this handbook investigate key issues and concepts central to understanding our current relationship with other animals and the potential for coexistence in an ecological community of living beings.

List of contents

  • Preface

  • List of Contributors

  • Introduction, Linda Kalof

  • Part I. Animals in the Landscape of Law, Politics and Public Policy

  • 1. Animal Rights, Gary Francione and Anna Charlton

  • 2. Animals in Political Theory, Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka

  • 3. Animals as Living Property, David Favre

  • 4. The Human-Animal Bond, James Serpell

  • 5. Animal Sheltering, Leslie Irvine

  • 6. Roaming Dogs, Arnold Arluke and Kate Atema

  • 7. Misothery: Contempt for Animals and Nature, Its Origins, Purposes, and Repercussions, James B. Mason

  • 8. Continental Approaches to Animals and Animality, Ralph Acampora

  • 9. Animals as Legal Subjects, Paul Waldau

  • 10. The Struggle for Compassion and Justice through Critical Animal Studies, Carol Gigliotti

  • 11. Interspecies Dialogue and Animal Ethics: The Feminist Care Perspective, Josephine Donovan

  • Part II. Animal Intentionality, Agency and Reflexive Thinking

  • 12. Cetacean Cognition, Lori Marino

  • 13. History and Animal Agencies, Chris Pearson

  • 14. What Was It Like to Be a Cow? History and Animal Studies, Erica Fudge

  • 15. Animals as Sentient Commodities, Rhoda Wilkie

  • 16. Animal Work, Jocelyne Porcher

  • 17. Animals as Reflexive Thinkers: The Aponoian Paradigm, Mark Rowlands and Susana Monsó

  • Part III. Animals as Objects in Science, Food, Spectacle and Sport

  • 18. The Ethics of Animal Research - Theory and Practice, Bernard Rollin

  • 19. The Ethics of Food Animal Production, Paul Thompson

  • 20. Animals as Scientific Objects, Mike Michael

  • 21. The Problem with Zoos, Randy Malamud

  • 22. Wolf Hunting and the Ethics of Predator Control, John Vucetich and Michael P. Nelson

  • Part IV. Animals in Cultural Representations

  • 23. Practice and Ethics of the Use of Animals in Contemporary Art, Joe Zammit-Lucia

  • 24. Animals in Folklore, Boria Sax

  • Part V. Animals in Ecosystems

  • 25. Archaeozoology, Juliet Clutton-Brock

  • 26. Animals and Ecological Science, Anita Guerrini

  • 27. Staging Privilege, Proximity, and "Extreme Animal Tourism," Jane Desmond

  • 28. Commensal Species, Terr

    About the author

    Linda Kalof is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Animal Studies Program at Michigan State University.

    Summary

    Intellectual struggles with the "animal question"-- how humans can rethink and reconfigure their relationships with other animals-- first began to take hold in the 1970s. Over the next forty years, scholars from a wide range of fields would make sweeping reevaluations of the relationship between humans and other animals.

    The Oxford Handbook of Animal Studies brings these diverse evaluations together for the first time, paying special attention to the commodification of animals, the degradation of the natural world and a staggering loss of animal habitat and species extinction, and the increasing need for humans to coexist with other animals in urban, rural and natural contexts. Linda Kalof maps these themes into the five major categories that structure this volume: Animals in the Landscape of Law, Politics and Public Policy; Animal Intentionality, Agency and Reflexive Thinking; Animals as Objects in Science, Food, Spectacle and Sport; Animals in Cultural Representations; and Animals in Ecosystems. Written by international scholars with backgrounds in philosophy, law, history, English, art, sociology, geography, archaeology, environmental studies, cultural studies, and animal advocacy, the thirty chapters in this handbook investigate key issues and concepts central to understanding our current relationship with other animals and the potential for coexistence in an ecological community of living beings.

    Additional text

    Offering an outlook for healthier collaboration, these varied voices constitute a valuable and timely authority to consider while venturing on an animal studies project -- no matter from which discipline.

    Report

    Offering an outlook for healthier collaboration, these varied voices constitute a valuable and timely authority to consider while venturing on an animal studies project -- no matter from which discipline. Liza Bauer, Kult Online

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