Beschreibung
This volume explores the experiences of those with little or no powerusually, although not exclusively, animals. The theme of animals as experiencing entities is what links the chapters and characterises the volume. Broadly each author in this volume contributes in one of two ways. The first group, in Section 1, theoretically engages animal subjectivity, animal experiences, and ways in which these are to some extent accessible and knowable to humans. The second group of authors, in Section 2, offer narrative accounts about specific animals or groups of animals and explore to some extent their subjective historical experiences. In summary, the first section diversely theorises about animal experiences, while the second sections authors assume animals subjective experiences and construct narratives that take into account how animals might have subjectively experienced historical phenomena.
Autorenportrait
Michael Glover is an animal historian specialising in cattle histories in southern Africa during the colonial period. Michael is an Associate Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics and a member of the Australasian Animal Studies Association. Les Mitchell is a Research Fellow at the International Studies Group, University of the Free State. He is also a Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics. He has a particular interest in the critical analysis of texts relating to nonhuman animals.
Inhalt
1. Introduction: caught with ourselves in the net of life and time.-Part I. Animals as Experiencing Entities, Theories and Perspectives.- 2. Je suis, Je suis I am, I follow: Formation of Animal Individual and Cultural Selves.- 3. Pain in Context: Indicators and Expressions of Animal Pain.- 4. Critical Animal Historiography, Experiential Subjectivity and Animal Standpoint Theory.- 5. Sensing Life: Intersections of Animal and Sensory Histories.-Part II. Animals Experiences in Narratives and History.- 6. History According To Cattle.- 7. A Historiography of Great Animal Massacres.- 8. From French Guinea to Florida: Chimpanzees as Multi-Purpose Objects of Research (1920s-1940s).- 9. Animals And Colonial Indian Archives: Locating Nonhuman Agency and Subjectivities.- 10. Law Through the Eyes of Animals.- 11. Stolen Children of the Endless Night. A Critical Account of the Lives of British PitPonies.
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