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E-raamat: Rise of Critical Animal Studies: From the Margins to the Centre

Edited by (Flinders University, Australia), Edited by (Edge Hill University, UK)
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As the scholarly and interdisciplinary study of human/animal relations becomes crucial to the urgent questions of our time, notably in relation to environmental crisis, this collection explores the inner tensions within the relatively new and broad field of animal studies. This provides a platform for the latest critical thinking on the condition and experience of animals. The volume is structured around four sections:engaging theory doing critical animal studies critical animal studies and anti-capitalism contesting the human, liberating the animal: veganism and activism.The Rise of Critical Animal Studies demonstrates the centrality of the contribution of critical animal studies to vitally important contemporary debates and considers future directions for the field. This edited collection will be useful for students and scholars of sociology, gender studies, psychology, geography, and social work.

Arvustused

"Indispensable for anyone concerned with how badly humans treat each other, other animals, and the environment. Summing Up: Essential" - P. Beirne, University of Southern Maine for CHOICE

List of illustrations
xv
List of contributors
xvi
Acknowledgements xx
Introduction: locating the `critical' in critical animal studies 1(16)
Nik Taylor
Richard Twine
PART I Engaging theory
17(52)
1 Beyond speciesism: intersectionality, critical sociology and the human domination of other animals
19(17)
Erika Cudworth
2 From centre to margins and back again: critical animal studies and the reflexive human self
36(16)
Kay Peggs
3 Vegans on the verge of a nervous breakdown
52(17)
Sara Salih
PART II Doing critical animal studies
69(68)
4 Listening to voices: on the pleasures and problems of studying human--animal relationships
71(17)
Lynda Birke
5 Studying perpetrators of socially-sanctioned violence against animals through the I/eye of the CAS scholar
88(23)
Jessica Groling
6 Doing critical animal studies differently: reflexivity and intersectionality in practice
111(26)
Nathan Stephens Griffin
PART III Critical animal studies and anti-capitalism
137(64)
7 Labourers or lab tools? Rethinking the role of lab animals in clinical trials
139(26)
Jonathan L. Clark
8 The cultural hegemony of meat and the animal industrial complex
165(18)
Amy J. Fitzgerald
Nik Taylor
9 Mapping non-human resistance in the age of biocapital
183(18)
Agnieszka Kowalczyk
PART IV Contesting the human, liberating the animal: veganism and activism
201(61)
10 `The greatest cause on earth': the historical formation of veganism as an ethical practice
203(22)
Matthew Cole
11 On the limits of food autonomy -- rethinking choice and privacy
225(16)
Stephanie Jenkins
Richard Twine
12 The radical debate: a straw man in the movement?
241(21)
Carol S. Glasser
Conclusion: future directions for critical animal studies 262(15)
Helena Pedersen
Vasile Stanescu
Index 277
Nik Taylor is an Associate Professor in Sociology at Flinders University in South Australia where she teaches and researches on human-animal relations.

Richard Twine is a sociologist and has most recently held positions at the Universities of Glasgow and Lancaster.