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Call for Papers: Animals and Agency
Edited by Sarah E. McFarland and Ryan Hediger Scholars increasingly consider the presence and function of animals in literature, film, art, and philosophy, while hugely popular documentary films like 'March of the Penguins' and 'Grizzly Man' and a significant number of animated films show this interest in film and popular culture as well. Some scholars focus on how representations of "the animal" as an "other" help to construct the human, whereas others examine the relationships between humans and other animals and how human and animal subjectivity are articulated.
This collection will examine the presence of animal agency in literature, film, pop culture, and theory to answer the following questions:
What do representations of animals in texts of all sorts (literature, film, popular media, advertising, and so on) signify about animal agency and human agency?
How do such representations call into question the distinction between humans and animals?
How do animals' actions indicate their agency?
How has human agency been constructed with reference to animals? What influence does this construction have on agency? On animals? On humans?
How do popular media and/or advertising make use of animal representations to encourage human actions? (Frontier Airlines, for instance)
How can we understand the connections (historical, theoretical, or otherwise) among the categories "animal," "agency," and "representation"?
What political or policy ramifications should ensue from complications of human and animal agency?
How do representations of animals undermine or complicate the boundary that supposedly differentiates animals from humans?
Please submit 1000-word proposals via email to Sarah McFarland at mcfarlands@nsula.edu by May 1, 2007 as a .doc or .rtf attachment.
Accepted essays (6-8,000 words) will be due August 1.
Questions are welcome:
Sarah McFarland Assistant Professor of English Department of Language and Communication Northwestern State University (318) 357-6929 mcfarlands@nsula.edu
Animal Studies website launch Annie Potts and Philip Armstrong have launched the website for New Zealand's first national research centre for Human-Animal Studies based at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, Aotearoa New Zealand. See:
http://www.nzchas.canterbury.ac.nz/
Summer Retreat Program at Shin Pond, Maine, USA, for Animal/Humane Studies The 300-acre Wiseman Camp and Sanctuary at Shin Pond, Maine, is the site of a Summer Retreat Program for writers, scholars, artists, educators, and other cultural producers and knowledge workers focusing on animals and/or their humane treatment. The program, operated by The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), invites all interested parties to apply for use of the property between June 1 and September 30, 2007. The Wiseman Camp, just ten miles from the northern entrance to Baxter State Park, offers an outstanding atmosphere in which to work, especially work involving research, contemplation, and writing. A wooded retreat at the edge of a pristine and peaceful pond, it is a lovely, secluded, and inspirational setting. The purpose of the work retreat program operated by The HSUS is to encourage scholarly, cultural, and practical projects relating to animals, and to provide a site for enhanced productivity on such projects. Applications for use of the Wiseman property will be evaluated by an ad hoc committee comprised of HSUS staff members representing a broad range of disciplines and interests
There is no application form to submit, but the applicant must present:
· a statement of interest that includes relevant information on the project he/she intends to pursue; · the specific work product that will be produced during the retreat period; · details of the likely outcome or application of the work undertaken or product produced at the retreat; · any applicable scheduling concerns or scheduling preferences; and · two professional references.
Applicants may be asked to submit copies of prior publications. If approved, the applicant will be expected to cover the costs of transportation to and from the Wiseman Camp and Sanctuary, local transportation while staying there, food, beverages, entertainment, recreational activities (including admission to nearby Baxter State Park), long distance telephone services, remote internet connection charges, and all other costs connected with the applicant’s use of the property. The HSUS will, however, pay for local telephone service, electrical utilities, and routine maintenance.
Participants may take up to three household members (including spouses, significant others, and children) with them. Please note that the property is an HSUS Wildlife Land Trust-protected wildlife sanctuary, so companion animals are not permitted on the property at any time.
The house at Shin Pond has the basic amenities common to any comfortable vacation ”camp” house in the area, including all utilities and a full complement of furniture, kitchen ware, and other household equipment. There is a telephone line but no DSL or other high-speed Internet access.
There is convenient food shopping at Shin Pond Village and the nearby town of Patten.
The broad guidelines for the kind of work appropriate to the retreat include: *major intellectual projects such as working on a book, writing a chapter on an animal-related topic, preparing a case study, or preparing an on-line course in animal studies. *projects of smaller scope and/or shorter duration
Applications should be sent to Bernard Unti at The Humane Society of the United States, 2100 L Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20037, or by fax to 301-258-3077, or email to bunti@hsus.org. Applications will be received on an ongoing basis beginning immediately.
The Centre for Animal Welfare and Ethics (CAWE) School of Veterinary Science, University of
Queensland
The latest newsletter from the Centre for Animal Welfare and Ethics is now available at their website. 'The Mission of the Centre is to improve understanding of
animal welfare, and ethical issues concerned with animal welfare,
through research, teaching, legislation and training.' For more information contact Nicola Cross: n.cross@uq.edu.au
Animals and Society II: Considering Animals 3 - 6 July 2007
Old Woolstore, Hobart, Tasmania
Registration is now open!
For more information and online registration visit the conference
website: www.cdesign.com.au/as2007 <http://www.cdesign.com.au/as2007>
Please contact Meredith with any queries meredith@cdesign.com.au
Feral Horse Workshop Proceedings The Proceedings of the Invasive Animals CRC-hosted workshop on feral horse management held in Canberra last August, are now available via the IA CRC website: http://www.invasiveanimals.com/index.php?id=Publications_Proceedings This document was edited by Dr Michelle Dawson, Chris Lane and Dr Glen Saunders. A limited number of hard copies have been printed.
International Conference on Ecology and Management of Wildlife Diseases 12 to 16 November 2007 The Lakeside Conference Centre, Central Science Laboratory, York, UK Wildlife diseases continue to make the headlines, with widespread implications for human health, conservation, agriculture and ecosystem health. Our understanding of disease epidemiology and risk assessment has improved enormously in recent years but scientists and policy makers continue to face considerable challenges in developing strategies for the sustainable management of wildlife disease problems. This conference will bring together leading practitioners in the fields of disease research, socio-economics, risk assessment and policy formation. Presentations are guaranteed to be thought-provoking, and debate will be lively. Make a diary note now. More information will be circulated shortly.
Major themes planned include: management and control socio-economics and ethics surveillance, risk assessment and contingency planning epidemiology field evidence and experiments conservation ecosystem health and climate change
Nature Matters: Materiality and the More-than-Human in Cultural Studies of the Environment Call for Papers and Panels Toronto, Ontario October 25-28, 2007 Hosted by the Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Culture Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University
Having emerged from the 1990s 'nature wars' that pitted so-called social constructivists against putative deep ecologists, scholars interested in questions of the relations between culture and nature (to use a convenient shorthand) have begun increasingly to engage in research that rejects both poles of that ultimately sterile debate: Nature may be a social construction, but it is pure hubris to think and act as if human beings are the only ones doing the constructing. For Haraway, the task of acknowledging and working with the implications of this observation about what she has called the ‘artifactuality’’ of nature is both scientific and political; for McKay, as demonstrated by his own lyric and metaphoric insistences, questions about nature, otherness and language are also poetic and ethical. For most scholars engaged in environmental work in the social sciences and humanities, the task is all of these things and more. How do we think and write about human, social processes and power relations in a way that also speaks to the activity and alterity of the more-than-human beings involved? How do we gesture, in our language and politics, to the ways in which nature is both interlayered with and outside of our cultural understandings of nature? What difference does it make in environmental cultural studies that we take more-than-human actors as our points of inquiry and conversation? In short: How do we make nature ‘matter’ in cultural studies of the environment?
This conference will address these questions by providing a multidisciplinary forum for scholars interested in the broad field of environmental cultural studies to come together to discuss just how it is that nature matters in their work. To be held in downtown Toronto, hosted by the Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Culture in the Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University from October 25-28, 2007, the conference will include six plenary sessions highlighting the recent work of prominent scholars in various corners of environmental cultural studies ? including environmental history, cultural geography, ecological and feminist science studies, environmental politics and philosophy, ecological literary criticism, animal studies, and ecocultural studies - and concurrent sessions designed to foster both intra- and cross-disciplinary conversations in these and other fields. Selected papers from the conference will be published as a collection.
In organizing this conference on the theme of nature, materiality and culture, we recognize a large family of like questions that have arisen in different disciplinary contexts, such as:
- How do we in cultural studies research the influential complexities of other-than-human ‘actants’? - What does it mean to consider nature as artifact? As landscape? As text? How do we read this ecological ‘archive’ in environmental history, or interpret the relationship between land and literature in a way that hears the voices of the creatures/places beyond the words? - How can attention to the sensuality of ecological experiences enrich the cultural incisiveness of postcolonial and genealogical environmental projects? - What can a reconsideration of the physical add to cultural geography? How is life (human and more-than-human) constitutive of space? - What role might the natural sciences play in cultural analysis ? or, conversely, how can we understand natural sciences as particular cultures of nature? - How do animals exist as subjects in matrices of power relations? How are their presences in human cultures part of a largely unwritten history of the humanities and social sciences? - How can we develop a practice of language and/or poetics and/or ethics that respects the moments at which nature refuses its cultural construction, the moments of alterity that permeate human/more-than-human interactions? - How can environmental justice concerns more fully inform, and be informed by, concerns about animal cultures or consciousnesses? - How do diverse environmental cultures offer a challenge to Eurowestern bifurcations of nature and culture? - How are feminist reconsiderations of corporeality crucial resources for the ‘incorporation’ of nature in cultural studies? - How do we conceive of environmental studies as part of the humanities and social sciences, and how might this conception both complement and conflict with natural sciences? - How can conceptions of and interactions with the more-than-human inform and construct human conceptions of the ?good?? - How do ecological relations embody, reflect, and transform the social relations of their production and reproduction? - How might green politics respond to a reconsidered materiality?
The conference will include opening and closing plenary sessions for all participants on each day of the conference in order to provide us with a developing common ground for conversation. Our plenary speakers are:
Stacy Alaimo, University of Texas, Arlington (feminist science studies) Bruce Braun, University of Minnesota (cultural geography) Julie Cruikshank, University of British Columbia (indigenous studies) Giovanna Di Chiro, Mt. Holyoke College (environmental justice) Patrick Murphy, University of Central Florida (ecological literary criticism) Mick Smith, Queen?s University (environmental philosophy and politics) Cary Wolfe, Rice University (animal philosophies)
We thus invite proposals for panels and papers from scholars in any discipline whose work might inform, or be informed by, these or other views of nature ‘mattering’ in environmental cultural studies. In addition to the specific questions listed above, areas of focus might include, but are not limited to:
? environmental literature and ecocriticism: text and nature ? body practices and embodiments: nature, flesh and culture ? environmental and natural history: land as archive ? environmental ethics and epistemologies ? ecopoetics and ecolinguistics ? the implications of physicality for cultural geographies ? animal/human animal communications and cultures ? environmental justice, postcolonial, feminist, and/or queer ecologies ? sensuousness and cultural materialism ? science studies: (cross-)cultures of environmental research and experiment ? ecopolitics and political ecology: struggling into a landscape? ? communicating (with) the Other: media and environment ? addressing the Other: Derrida, Levinas and beyond
We invite proposals for fully-formed panels (three papers each, 20 minutes per paper, with a chair but no discussant), and also enthusiastically invite maverick papers that have no particular family of origin. Panel abstracts should include a general overview of the panel plus abstracts for each paper (all 250 words or under); individual paper abstracts should be no more than 300 words. All contributors should include a one-page individual CV with their abstract. Graduate student papers are welcome.
Contributions from artists, musicians, creative writers and performers are also welcome; these contributions need not conform to the three-person panel format. Please contact the organizers for further information.
Abstracts should be submitted by February 10 to:
Cate Mortimer-Sandilands Megan Salhus Canada Research Chair in Sustainability and Culture Doctoral Candidate: essandi@yorku.ca msalhus@yorku.ca
Faculty of Environmental Studies York University 4700 Keele Street Toronto, ON M3J 1P3 CANADA
Presenters will be contacted in early March regarding acceptance of their papers. Final abstracts will be compiled for the program in late August and distributed in advance to conference participants. Depending on the outcome of funding applications, some travel-related costs may be supported for graduate students (these cannot be guaranteed). Please indicate in your initial application if you would like to be considered for a travel subsidy.
Report from Dr Carol Freeman, University of Tasmania, on the Kindred Spirits Conference, held at the University of Indiana from 7-9 September 2006 http://www.indiana.edu/~kspirits/ This intimate animal studies* conference, with keynote speakers Donna Haraway and Carol Adams and only 29 presenters (selected from about 200 submissions) took place over two and half days in the sumptuous Indiana Memorial Union building in Bloomington. The distinguished speakers and wide range of papers resulted in a high level of attention from the audience and often vigorous debate. The keynote speakers attended every session, with Donna Haraway often articulating the ideas she felt were generated by a panel. Here are some of the highlights of the conference: In the beginning, there was a clash between indigenous and Christian views in the Religion and Animals panel. Steve Russell, a citizen of the Cherokee nation, objected to the way he had seen Amish people treat animals, while Lisa Kemmerer challenged the established view that the Bible stressed the use of animals by humans. Steve emphasised the centrality of animals in indigenous stories, quoted Alice Walker - 'animals exist for their own reasons' - and Singer's comment that Western ideas about animals are based on hierarchical lines. He said, 'even animals rights and vegetarians dont reject hierarchy'. He maintained that we have a duty to nonhuman animals. John Nagle explored the significance of new ways of thinking about animals for the law. If animals have rights, such as in endangered species acts, can species bring legal proceedings against humans? Can we re-imagine ourselves as guardians of animals? In the following discusssion the symbolic function of the law was mentioned and Rhode Island's guardianship laws (http://www.nabr.org/AnimalLaw/Guardianship/index.htm) noted. However, many US states have been unsuccessful in implementing laws against bad treatment of animals such as pigs and wolves. Panels on Species and Race and Hybrid Creatures delved into theoretical issues - there was talk of animals and 'affect' and of animals functioning as an 'interruption' to academic thought in the humanities. Colleen Boggs isolated four catogories of human and animal - 'animalised animals' - that are objectivised; 'humanised humans' who respond to tortured animals; 'humanised animals': for instance pets; and 'animalised humans' - slaves. The discusssion centered on the idea of 'species', how actual daily practices have everything to do with race, class etc and the need for animal-human intersectional analysis - not how animals have been figured, but how ideas are taken up: the multiplicity of practices that are produced by images. Annie Potts spoke about some people in the US who have modified their bodies to resemble animals and Mathew Carlarco gave a paper on Derrida and animal studies. The panel I took part in, Economies and Geographies of Desire, began with Jane Desmond talking about art by animals; that is, the growing global trade in art by elephants, apes and dolphins. This was a fascinating presentation that revealed the intentional nature of this art - an orangutang painted and chose the correct colours for a dog he can name - and what this implies for the border that is usually maintained between humans and animals. Bart Welling's paper on eco-porn and the limits of visualising the nonhuman animal raised a number of difficult questions following the death of Steve Irwin several days earlier, and Germaine Greer's comments. A special event by Anima Visual Arts Studios showed the reaction of apes to the renovation of their living quarters with bright colours, silouettes of their bodies, and geometric patterns. The apes were cautious at first, then fascinated. In a panel on Animal Subjectivity Michelle Lindenblatt analysed the ASPCA 'We are their Voice' campaign http://www.aspca.org/speak/ASPCAmain.html and found difficulties with the central claim, although others felt that there was no problem as the blank balloons in these ads left meaning open to the viewer. Two of the most compelling speakers were biologists on the Animal Pleasure/Human Desire panel. Marc Bekoff began his paper with the statement 'We have to be anthropomorphic - we have no other choice' and pointed out that animals have a point of view - they dont like to be treated badly. He feels that the image of the world around us that science provides in highly deficient. Jonathan Balcombe talked about the capacity for animals to experience pleasure and decided that if they have a quality of life they have rights and we have obligations. Also in this panel, Carol Gigliotti questioned the ethics of artists working with genetic techonologies and later, veterinarian Heather Narver spoke about the resistance to animal studies in the humanities by others in her profession. The conference ended with a panel on Animals and the Law, where it was commented that the law has actually been most effective when animals are regarded as property - and that property law is constantly evolving. John Nagle concluded that the law needs to be changed to reflect new attitudes toward animals eg. in managing wild animals and wildlife habitat. At the close of the conference, the 2007 UTas Animals and Society conference was announced and a flyer made available. The beauty of this conference was the small number of participants and opportunities for discussion with keynote speakers and members of panels. The single session meant everyone was heard and panels were carefully constructed so that each presentation related to, or led into, the following one. Most of the disciplines involved in human-animal studies were represented and it was evident that there is tremendous interest in the field and eagerness to keep contact and attend further conferences. Thanks to the School of Geography and Environmental Studies for assisting me to make the trip. *In America the field tends to be called 'animals studies in the humanities' or just 'animal studies'.
Human-Animal Studies Book Series, Brill Publishers
In Search of Consistency: Ethics and Animals Lisa Kremmer Kenneth Shapiro of the Animals & Society Institute has announced
the publication of the third book in the Human-Animal Studies Book
Series - Lisa Kemmerer's In Search of Consistency: Ethics and Animals.
This volume introduces the most important ideas in animal ethics and
builds on a critical dialogue emerging at the intersection of animal
rights, environmental ethics, and religious studies.
In Search of Consistency examines the work of influential scholars Tom
Regan (animal rights), Peter Singer (utilitarian ethics), Andrew Linzey
(theologian), and Paul Taylor (environmental ethics), and explores
ethics and animals across six world religions (Indigenous faiths,
Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam). In Search of
Consistency sheds light on ‘the sanctity of life’ by means of an
intriguing moral theory, ‘The Minimize Harm Maxim’, rooted in the
time-honoured moral ideals of impartiality and consistency. This volume
questions what it means to be human and challenges our assumed place in
the universe
Lisa Kemmerer is an Assistant Professor at Montana State U., Billings,
(Reed; MTS, Harvard; Ph.D., University of Glasgow, Scotland). Her
recent publications focus on animals and ethics; shehas produced two
documentaries on Buddhism. An artist, activist, and adventurer,
Kemmerer has traveled extensively. For book order information see
www.animalsandsociety.org. 100 Academics Support New Animal Ethics Centre at Oxford More than 100 academics from 10 countries have agreed to become Advisers to the new Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics - launched online on Monday (27 November) at www.oxfordanimalethics.com - which aims to put animals on the intellectual agenda. The Centre is the world's first academy dedicated to the enhancement of the ethical status of animals through academic publication, teaching and research. Academics world-wide from both the sciences and the humanities will be eligible to become Fellows of the Centre. It will act as an international, independent think tank for the advancement of progressive thought about animals. One of the areas of research will be the relationship between animal abuse and violence to human beings. One of the world's major writers, who has explored this link - Nobel Laureate in Literature, Professor J. M. Coetzee - has honoured the Centre by agreeing to become its first Honorary Fellow. Other projects being pursued include an online course in animal ethics, a new monograph series, and a new Journal of Animal Ethics. The Centre's first director, Oxford theologian, the Revd Professor Andrew Linzey, said: 'The support of such a large number of internationally recognised academics underlines just how important animals are as a moral issue'. 'There is a strong rational case for animals, which has been recognised over the centuries by academics and philosophers. What is needed is for this rational case to be much better known and there are now signs that progressive thinking is becoming mainstream. Importantly, animals are now recognised as sentient beings in European law; and, in the UK, the most comprehensive - and long overdue - overhaul of animal welfare legislation for almost a century is shortly to be enacted into law.' 'We must strive to ensure animal issues are highlighted and rationally discussed throughout society - we cannot change the world for animals without changing our ideas about them. The Centre will promote ethical attitudes and contribute to informed public debate.' Professor Priscilla Cohn, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Penn State University, who is the Associate Director of the Centre, added: 'It seems to us that academics should take the lead in helping to foster a new kind of debate about animals – one that goes beyond slogans and stereotypes'. The Advisers and the first six Fellows are listed on the Centre's website: www.oxfordanimalethics.com . The Centre is named after the distinguished Spanish Philosopher, José Ferrater Mora, who courageously spoke out against bull-fighting in Spain. For more information, contact Professor Andrew Linzey, (+44) (0)1865 201565; director@oxfordanimalethics.com. Or Professor Priscilla Cohn, (001) 610 525 2957 or 610 525 5089 The Revd Professor Andrew Linzey is a Member of the Faculty of Theology, University of Oxford, and holds the world's first post in Ethics, Theology and Animal Welfare - the Bede Jarrett Senior Research Fellowship at Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford. He has written or edited 20 books, including Animal Theology (SCM Press/University of Illinois Press, 1994) and Animal Rights: A Historical Anthology (Columbia University Press, 2005). Professor Priscilla N. Cohn is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Abington College, Penn State University. She has taught courses on animal ethics for 35 years, and lectured on five continents. Her books include Contraception in Wildlife, Book 1 (Edwin Mellen Press, 1996) and Ethics and Wildlife (Edwin Mellen Press, 1999). The first six Founding Fellows comprise three theologians, two philosophers, and one scientist from the UK, US, Australia, Armenia and Canada: Professor Paul Ara Barsam (theologian at the University of Yerevan, Armenia), Professor Mark Bernstein (philosopher at Purdue University, USA), Dr Scott Cowdell (theologian at Charles Sturt University and Rector, St Paul's Anglican Church, Canberra, Australia), Professor Susan Pigott (Old Testament scholar at Hardin-Simmons University, Abilene, Texas), Professor Mark Rowlands (philosopher at the University of Hertfordshire), and Professor Martin Willison (biologist and environmentalist at Dalhousie University,Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada).
Journal Announcement: ANTHROZOOS
Starting in 2007, the International Society for Anthrozoology (ISAZ) has placed its
journal Anthrozoös: A Multidisciplinary Journal of the Interactions of People and Animals with BERG Publishers
http://www.bergpublishers.com/us/journals.htm.
Anthrozoös is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal with a distinguished
history as a pioneer in the field of human-animal relations. It is
about to celebrate its 20th
anniversary.
ISAZ was formed in 1991 as a supportive organization for the scientific and scholarly study of human-animal interactions. It is a nonprofit, nonpolitical organization with a worldwide, multi-disciplinary membership of scholars.
ISAZ aims to promote the study of human-animal interactions and relationships by
encouraging and publishing research, holding meetings, and disseminating information.
Topics addressed by the Society and in Anthrozoös include:
* History and sociology of human-animal interactions
* Gender effects on human-animal interaction
* Companion animal behaviour and welfare
* Anthrozoological research methods
* Medical and social consequences of human-animal interaction
* Attitudes to animals
For information about joining ISAZ please contact Kathy Kruger
mailto:kkruger@vet.upenn.edu. Institutional subscription information should be sent to Corina Kapinos mailto:ckapinos@bergpublishers.com. For information on submitting an article please link to:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/uk/anthroz/anthroz_submissions.htm.
Kathryn Earle
Managing Director
Berg Publishers
http://www.bergpublishers.com
Animals & Society Institute Fellowship Program
The Animals & Society Institute invites applications for its first annual summer fellowship program for scholars pursuing research in Human-Animal Studies. In the summer of 2007, this interdisciplinary program will enable 6-8 fellows to pursue research in residence at North Carolina State University. Fellows will have access to the Tom Regan Animal Rights Archive, which is housed at NCSU. Tom Regan, philosopher of the moral status of animals, will also participate actively in the program. The fellowship is designed to support recipients’ individual research through mentorship, guest lectures, and scholarly exchange among fellows and opportunities to contribute to the intellectual life of the host institution. All fellows must be in continuous residence for the duration of the program, June 26-July 31, 2007.
The fellowships are open to scholars from any discipline investigating a topic related to human-animal relationships. Topics of particular interest for this year’s program include:
· human-animal relationships in science and technology · animal issues in philosophy · animal issues in legal studies · the relation between human violence and animal abuse · human-animal relationships in agriculture · the role of the community in companion animal overpopulation · the history and regulation of “puppy mills.”
Application deadline: February 8, 2007
Amount of Award Scholars selected to participate in the fellowship program will be awarded a stipend of $3,000. to help cover travel costs, housing, living expenses, books and other research expenses.
Eligibility Applicants must (1) possess a Ph.D. or equivalent, or be a doctoral student at the dissertation stage, (2) have a commitment to advancing research in Human-Animal Studies, (3) be actively engaged, during the fellowship program, in a research project that culminates in a journal article, book, or other scholarly presentation, and (4) submit a follow-up report six months after the fellowship’s completion.
Application Applicants should email electronic copies of the following items to fellowshipapplication@animalsandsociety.org: · Cover sheet with the applicant’s name, mailing address to be used for future correspondence, telephone and fax numbers, e-mail address, present rank and institution name, date Ph.D. received or expected, citizenship status, title of project, history of fellowships and grants received during the past five years. · Project proposal of two to three pages (single-spaced) that describes the project and indicates work completed on the project to date. As the description will be considered by a panel of scholars from a variety of disciplines, it should be written for non-specialists. · Curriculum vitae of no more than three pages.
In addition, applicants must also send two letters of recommendation to:
Committee on Fellowships, Animals & Society Institute, 403 McCauley Street, Washington Grove MD 20880.
Applicants are responsible for contacting referees and supplying them with a description of the project.
Selection Process The selection committee will include members from a range of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences.
Applications will be evaluated on the contribution that the completed project will make to Human-Animal studies, the qualifications of the applicant to complete the research, the project’s relation to the resources and host faculty of the sponsoring institution, and how well individual applicants’projects complement each other.
Applicants will be notified by e-mail and letter in March 2007.
The fellowship program will be directed by Ken Shapiro, editor of Society and Animals. Please address all correspondence to him at the following address: Committee on Fellowships Animals & Society Institute 403 McCauley Street Washington Grove MD 20880 ken.shapiro@animalsandsociety.org (301) 963-4751 www.animalsandsociety.org
CALL FOR PAPERS THINKING ABOUT ANIMALS: DOMINATION, CAPTIVITY, LIBERATION CONFERENCE AT BROCK UNIVERSITY, ST.CATHERINES, ONTARIO, CANADA MARCH 15-16, 2007 To celebrate the creation of a new Concentration and Minor in Critical Animal Studies, and as part of our commitment to engaged scholarship directed towards social justice, the Department of Sociology at Brock University is organizing a conference on the theme of ‘Domination, Captivity, Liberation’ to be held at Brock campus on March 15-16, 2007. We are pleased to co-sponsor this event with Niagara Action for Animals, a local non- profit, all-volunteer charity devoted to ending all forms of animal cruelty through education, direct action and legitimate protest.
We are all at a critical moment. The existing order of global capitalism and industrialization is unsustainable, directly linked with global warming and massive extinction of species. New social movements offer an alternative future and require a different consciousness about our place in the world. The animal liberation movement, once dismissed as a ‘single-issue’ cause is increasingly recognized as the logical next step in a broader emancipatory struggle. As Steve Best states in his essay ‘The New Abolitionism: Capitalism, Slavery and Human Emancipation’:
Animal liberation is not an alien concept to modern culture; rather it builds on the most progressive ethical and political values Westerners have devised in the last two hundred years --those of equality, democracy, and rights as it carries them to their logicalconclusion. The next great step in moral evolution is to abolish the last acceptable form of slavery that subjugates the vast majority of species on this planet to the violent whim of one. Moral advance today involves sending human supremacy to the same refuse bin that society earlier discarded much male supremacy and white supremacy. Animal liberation requires that people transcend the complacent boundaries of humanism inorder to make a qualitative leap in ethical consideration, thereby moving the moral bar from reason and language to sentience and subjectivity. (http://www.drstevebest.org/papers/vegenvani/new_abolitionism.php)
While Best and others recognize animal advocacy as a social movement that should be seen in the context of other challenges to corporate globalization and struggles for social justice, a growing number of universities have been adding courses that explore various dimensions of our relationships with other animals. At the same time, deep divisions have developed within the animal liberation movement itself, as outlinedin Gary Francione’s ‘Rain Without Thunder’. Many of those in the animal rights movement, such as Peter Singer, whose Animal Liberation is widely credited as a key text in the movement, have moved to reformist positions that embrace ‘humane slaughter’ while People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals applauds McDonald’s hamburger corporation and kills pound animals. Meanwhile, the animal exploitation industries and government have imposed new laws such as the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act in the USA.
This conference is intended as an opportunity for discussion of these developments. The conference is open to all and we invite participation from academics and activists. Those who register in advance will have the option of purchasing vegan meals. Proposals for papers and panels are invited and activist groups may request a table for display of their material. Participants will discuss a wide variety of issues, such as the following:
• Spectres of speciesism: philosophical and ideological legitimisations for exploitation of animals and ethical challenges to these legitimizations • Capitalism, ecological crisis and animal liberation • Representing animals: images of captivity, images of liberation • Manufacturing Consent: animals in advertising • Captivity industries and their prisoners • Animals as persons, property and commodities • Animals and the law • Boundaries, Empathy and Human Relationships with Other Animals • Us/Not Us: the imprisoning and liberating of apes -The Great Ape Project and equality beyond humanity; Release and Restitution; The PrimateFreedom Project • Emotions and sentience and why they matter • Lessons from ethology • Cross-cultural perspectives • ‘The Case for Comparing Atrocities’: Factory farms and Holocaust imagery • Blowback: unintended consequences of domination and captivity: BSE, Avian influenza, environmental degradation, dangers to human health, psychological effects • Sanctuaries • Corporate and government responses to animal liberation • ‘Green is the New Red’: Constructing the Ecoterrorist Menace • ‘Terrorists or Freedom Fighters’? Animal liberation and social justice • Debates on the future of the animal rights movement • The nature of liberation: welfare vs. abolition • Humane slaughter? Cage-free eggs? Corporate compassion? • Veganism as direct action
Deadline for proposals: January 15, 2007 Proposals will be reviewed by the organizing committee and those whose abstracts have been accepted will be notified by email. Please indicate any special needs and/or equipment requests well in advance. Please submit an abstract of approximately 500 words to: animalconference@brocku.ca
Universities Federation for Animal Welfare (UFAW) Animal Welfare Research Training Scholarship
As part of its endeavours to encourage high quality science likely to lead to substantial advances in animal welfare, UFAW is running a scheme to award UFAW Animal Welfare Research Training Scholarships to enable promising veterinary or science graduates to undertake three-year programmes of research leading to degrees at the doctorate level within the British Isles. UFAW would like particularly to encourage applications in the following fields:
· development of methodologies aimed at elucidation of the neurological basis of sentience in animals · developments in approaches to alleviating welfare problems in farmed, companion and/or laboratory animals through breeding · developments in detection and alleviation of pain · development of methods of welfare / quality of life assessment
UFAW does not wish to exclude potentially valuable projects in other aspects of animal welfare science and applications for work in other areas will also be considered.
The stipend for science graduates will be £16,283 rising to £19,230 for the third year (London weighting £18,211 rising to £21,507 for the third year) and for veterinary graduates, £17,097 rising to £20,192 for the third year (London weighting £19,121 rising to £22,583 for the third year). In addition, research costs up to £10,000 pa and approved tuition fees up to £3235 pa will be met (Applications for tuition fees in excess of this amount may be considered). Click here for further details.
Application for this award will be a two-stage process. Initially, supervisors are required to submit a brief Concept Note by 1st December 2006.
Further details and an application form can be found by visiting the UFAW website http://www.ufaw.org.uk/AWResearchtrainingscholarship.php
Universities Federation for Animal Welfare The Old School, Brewhouse Hill, Wheathampstead, Herts AL4 8AN, UK Email: ufaw@ufaw.org.uk Direct tel/fax: +(0)1276 500880 Office: +(0)1582 831818 (tel), 831414 (fax) UK Registered Charity Number: 207996
The Universities Federation for Animal Welfare (UFAW) is an independent registered UK charity that works to develop and promote improvements in the welfare of all animals through scientific and educational activity worldwide.
Science in the service of animal welfare
GENERAL EDITOR SOUGHT FOR ENCYCLOPEDIA ON ANIMALS IN HUMAN HISTORY M.E. Sharpe, an academic, reference, and educational publisher, is developing an encyclopedia on the role of animals in human history. Organized in an a-to-z format, the book will cover the interaction of humans and animals—both domesticated and non-domesticated—throughout global human pre-history and history. The book will be aimed at middle and high school students. The length and precise contents of the book will be determined by the editor, in consultation with the publisher. The publisher is currently looking for a general editor for the project. The general editor's tasks include: developing a table of contents, soliciting contributing scholars, and editing for content. Basic fact-checking, copy-editing, and indexing is handled by the publisher. The general editor will be paid an advance against standard royalties.
If you are interested in discussing this project further, please contact acquisitions editor James Ciment at james.ciment@comcast.net
CALL FOR PAPERS: HUMAN-ANIMAL RELATIONSHIPS IN HISTORY, for the 2008 Organization of American Historians meeting (March 27-31, 2008, New York City). Deadline: November 15, 2006 (the final OAH deadline is Jan. 15, 2007)
Susan Nance of the University of Guelph is looking to put together a panel for the 2008 OAH on human-animal relationships. She writes:
The theme for the OAH meeting that year is arranged around overcoming the fragmentation in US history and attempting to develop a synthesis and connections between subfields. So, I propose a panel that investigates the common history of humans and animals, looking for ways that historical animals and their behavior can be used to address some of the big questions in US history. The hope (for me at least!) is that eventually animals can be historicized as actors such that they become indispensable to any synthesis of American history. I am open to papers on any time period, region or species. For my part, I would like to present some of my research on the role of animals as actors in the history of American capitalism, by way of the role of animals in the entertainment business ca. 1870-1930. Please send along your ideas/proposals by email by November 15, 2006. (The final OAH deadline is January 15, 2007, but they are currently accepting panel proposals already, so the sooner the better!)
Susan Nance Department of History University of Guelph snance@uoguelph.ca
Animals and Society II: Considering Animals 3 - 6 July 2007 Old Woolstore, Hobart, Tasmania http://www.cdesign.com.au/animals2007/ Following on the success of the inaugural Animals and Society Conference held at the University of Western Australia in 2005, the Animals and Society Study Group (Australia) and the University of Tasmania are pleased to be hosting Animals and Society II: Considering Animals.
The conference aims to bring together researchers from a broad range of academic disciplines spanning the humanities, social sciences and sciences, as well as representatives from non-government organisations, industry and government, to examine the relationships between animals and humans from social, cultural, historical, geographical, environmental, moral, legal and political perspectives. The burgeoning academic field of human-animal studies is rapidly gaining international prominence. Considering Animals provides an important opportunity for researchers to share knowledge and experience in this exciting field and will encourage a critical approach to our relations with non-human animals. We see this conference as consolidating the field of human-animal studies in Australia and particularly welcome contributions from new disciplinary areas. Further details and call for papers available at http://www.cdesign.com.au/animals2007/
Call for Papers: focas, Forum On Contemporary Art & Society 6: Regional Animalities: Humans & Animal Relations in Southeast Asia
focas is back with our sixth volume, Regional Animalities: Humans & Animal Relations in Southeast Asia. For this volume, we are collaborating with Documenta 12, the international contemporary art event based in Kassel, Germany. Both the publication as a whole and selected articles from the forthcoming issue will be featured in documenta 12 magazines, the online editorial project bringing together independent publishing initiatives on art and culture from around the globe. (For more information on Documenta, refer to http://www.documenta.de.) In this context we are sending out a call for visual or textual responses from practitioners, scholars, writers and activists, to the themed sections detailed below. Please send a maximum 500-word proposal or a file with maximum 5 low-resolution images to focas@pacific.net.sg. Deadline for submissions: 15th November 06. Deadline for final input: 1st March 07. I. Main Themed Section: Regional Animalities The main theme for this sixth issue in the focas publication series concerns ways in which human animal exchanges and relationships are imagined, represented and performed in a range of different artistic and cultural political contexts—primarily, but not exclusively, in Singapore and Southeast Asia. We encourage input from art writers, practitioners and activists, as well as writers from the social and natural sciences. Proposals may choose to respond to, reject or transcend the following: · How do a multiplicity of real and imagined beasts brush, buzz, slink, stink and scuttle in and out of the everyday fantasies and signifying practices of contemporary Southeast Asian societies? · How are these phantoms and presences projected through human-human exchanges? · How do human-animal and animal-animal exchanges subvert, rupture, invade and expand upon human symbolic orders and signifying practices? · Which animals are eaten? Which are adored? Which animals are feared? Which animals are expelled? Which animals are sacred? Which profane? Which animals persist? Which animals are lost? · What historical/“indigenous” assumptions, representations, embodiments of other living creatures exist in human cultiures in the region? How do these relate to contemporary animal rights discourses? · How do vernacular attitudes to animals bleed into “shark tales”, “Hello Kitties” and other animated icons? · How have various creatures been represented and received in global and vernacular, experimentary and commercial cultural production, such as visual art, film, television, animation, advertising and fashion? · How do animals remap/reinvent human territories, spaces and places, waters and skies, cities and kampungs, skyscrapers and rubbish mountains? · How have recent outbreaks and invocations of SARS, bird flu and dengue fever recast human animal relations in the region? II. Art & Activism in Singapore 2004–6: Artists, Animals, Transients & The Death Penalty In the past two years in Singapore, three civil society movements have gained considerable visibility in an otherwise infamously disciplined social, political and media arena: · The animal welfare movement, buoyed by the public outcry over the Singapore Government’s culling of stray cats during the SARS outbreak in 2003. · A movement to lobby for basic labour and health rights for transient workers. · Artist and activist mobilisations against the mandatory death penalty for drug trafficking in Singapore—a hitherto no-go area for activist groups as it was considered just too difficult an issue to tackle. A number of the same actors, musicians, artists, are active in all three camps. In this section we are soliciting and commissioning reports on artist/activist involvement in all three issues. There are indeed links between the treatment of migrant workers, hoarded onto open trucks like livestock, and a dehumanisation/animalisation process in the ways in which death row prisoners (a number of whom are migrant drug peddlers) are impounded and eventually hanged. But what is also immediately apparent with these juxtapositions is how juicy, pleasurable, rich and evocative the writing and making of art about animals, conservation and animal welfare is, in contrast to a tired greyness of writing on labour and the absolute authority of (human) death, which overshadows attempts to respond to the death penalty in Singapore in art or theory. Indeed, there have been discussions in the editorial as to whether we even should be speaking of the death penalty in an art context. However reflexively and sensitively we handle this, are we inevitably just going to fuel the ravenous hunger of contemporary art and theory for the latest trauma of the human Other. III. focas on Censorship focas will be continuing to debate and document instances of censorship in the art and writing in Southeast Asia. This section will be compiled in collaboration with the international organisation Reporters Without Borders. focas review process After initial selection, papers for focasare reviewed via a process of transparent communication between writers, the focas editorial board and guest editors for specific themed issues. For more information, contact Lucy Davis, Assistant Professor, Art, Design & Media (ADM) Editor, Forum on Contemporary Art & Society (FOCAS) Email NTU: lucydavis@ntu.edu.sg FOCAS: focas@pacific.net.sg
Modern Mask The first issue of 'Modern Mask', a new online journal of the arts, has a film and tv section that includes work by various scholars on animal films and animal studies. The journal can be found at: http://www.modernmask.org Animal Studies Aotearoa announces the New Zealand Centre for Human-Animal Studies, University of Canterbury, New Zealand'Animal Studies Aotearoa' is a network of scholars in the field of human-animal studies based in the School of Culture, Literature and Society (CULS) at the University of Canterbury. The group is soon to establish the New Zealand Centre for Human-Animal Studies, and currently have research and teaching programmes in animal studies. See their website for more details: http://www.culs.canterbury.ac.nz/research/asa/index.shtml
Call for Papers Society & Animals Special Issue Violence & Animal Abuse: Advances in research & policy
In 1997 Society & Animals published a special issue which presented research examining aspects of the proposed link between deliberate animal abuse and human-directed violence. In the intervening years this field has grown in both scope and application. The aim of this special issue is to present papers that focus on research and/or policy developments related to the link between human violence and animal abuse. Papers are invited for this special issue; topics to be considered include, but are not limited to: · The status of the 'progression thesis' of violence · Professional or governmental response to animal abuse and interpersonal violence · Family violence and the role of animals · Broader, non-deliberate (e.g., neglect/hoarding), animal cruelty · Approaches to the assessment and treatment of animal abuse
Although the body of the issue will feature full research articles, other forms of papers also are welcome: theory, critical review, brief research reports, and commentary.
Special Issue Editors Tania Signal (t.signal@cqu.edu.au) Nik Taylor (n.taylor@cqu.edu..au)
Important Dates · Submissions are due June 1, 2007
· Anticipated publication of Special Issue, early 2008
Submissions · Papers must be submitted, electronically, to the Special Issue Editors
· All submitted articles must adhere to the Instructions to Authors of Society & Animals and will be reviewed according to the procedure laid out on the journal's web site (http://www.psyeta.org/sa/index.html)
CFP: Ecocriticism and The Animal Other Northeast Modern Language Association Convention 2007, Maryland, USA
Theorist Cary Wolfe claims the question of the animal is "perhaps the central problematic for contemporary culture and theory." This panel seeks papers that address the presence of the animal in literary, filmic, and other cultural forms. Proposals energized by interdisciplinary and cultural studies methodologies are especially welcome. Also welcome are proposals that use the location of the animal to theorize new modes of ecocritical practice.
This session responds to a groundswell in contemporary theoretical and ecocritical practice in which scholars have increasingly begun to attend to the presence and function of the animal in literature, film, art, and philosophy. Recent work by Donna Haraway, The Companion Species Manifesto; Giorgio Agamben, The Open: Man and Animal; Jacques Derrida, "And Say the Animal Responded"; Cary Wolfe, Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory and the anthology Zoontologies: The Question of the Animal; taken together with recent films such as March of the Penguins, Eight Below, Winged Migration, and Grizzly Man, indicate that representing and thinking about the animal occurs at all levels of culture. As Derrida and Haraway remind us, opening up the question of the animal simultaneously opens up the question of the human. That is, by interrogating the particular ways in which the status of animal is assigned to an "other," one creates the opportunity to investigate the operations of long humanist traditions that employ the construction of the animal to shore up the construction of the human.
The purpose of this session is to convene scholars whose work comes at the question of the animal from a variety of directions, thereby creating productive discussion that cuts across genre and discipline. In the service of examining representations of the animal in literature, film, and other cultural forms, topics might include: posthumanist perspectives on or theorizations of the animal, animals and technologies, the animal in/as art, animals and globalization, animality as inequality/animality and other inequalities, the companion animal.
This panel is co-sponsored by the Association of the Study of Literature and the Environment.
Proposals should be 500-750 words. Send proposal by email to: nmerola@risd.edu. Deadline: Sept 15, 2006.
CALL FOR PROPOSALS FOR SYMPOSIA, WORKSHOPS AND ORGANISED DISCUSSIONS 21st Annual Meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology http://compworx.isat.co.za/scb/callsym.htm
The 21st Annual Meeting of the Society for Conservation Biology, One World, One Conservation, One Partnership, will be held from 1 - 5 July 2007 in Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa. The Local Organising Committee (LOC) welcomes proposals for symposia, workshops and organised discussions - including those from the Social Sciences. All proposals must be submitted by 16 October 2006 to 2007@conbio.org The Local Organising Committee expects to select these sessions by 8 December 2006.
The theme of the 2007 annual meeting is One World, One Conservation, One Partnership and emphasises the need to move away from national, regional and disciplinary territoriality in support of a joint effort to conserve the world's biodiversity by uniting towards a common goal. Preference will be given to proposals that relate to one of the four major themes of the meeting (see website). We encourage organizers to address unifying conceptual issues (ecological, social, or both) rather than presenting a series of stand-alone case studies. Topics should differ from those presented at recent SCB annual meetings (see www.conbio.org/2006 for lists). Individuals may not submit more than one proposal. As a general rule, no individual may give more than one presentation at the meeting.
All organisers, symposium speakers, and invited participants must register by the early deadline of 16 March 2007.
For more information, contact the Local Organising Committee SCB 2007 Centre for African Conservation Ecology (ACE) Department of Zoology, P O Box 77000 Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Port Elizabeth 6031 tel +27 41 504 4278; fax +27 41 504 1778 email: 2007@conbio.org; www.conbio.org/2007Roanoke, Virginia, May 17-19, 2007
'Conservation Hunting' in New South Wales State Forests Conservation hunting programs are now in place in 142 State Forests. A total of 142 state forests are now officially declared under the Game and Feral Animal Control Act for conservation hunting programs.
The roll-out has occurred in three stages, commencing in March 2006 with 31 state forests, a further 66 forests in June and the latest declarations occurring last Friday (14th) for a further 45 state forests. Once Crown Land area (Grabine Lakeside State Park) was also declared in May 2006.
Since conservation hunting commenced on public land in NSW, Game Council has issued close to 1600 Restricted NSW Game Hunting Licences (R-Licences).
In that time, licensed hunters have officially reported culling close to 650 feral animals from State forests, mainly goats, wild deer, foxes and pigs. “The result is very pleasing, given the new licensing system only took effect in March this year. Despite claims by the anti-hunting groups, conservation hunters can make a contribution to feral animal control,’’ Mr Boyle said.
LINK TO DECLARED AREAS: http://www.gamecouncil.nsw.gov.au/
Taken from the Newsletter of the Invasive Animals CRC, "Feral Flyer", 21.07.06.
Call for Papers: "The Other Animals: Situating the non-human in Russian Culture and History"The significance of the animal "other" to the human condition is oft-noted and increasingly of interest to scholars in the humanities and social sciences. Claude Levi-Strauss' famous dictum, "animals are good to think with," Paul Shepard's assertion that "the others" (animals) made us human, and John Berger's insistence that humans must "look" at animals because we rely on the animal other for self-definition, all reference the diverse ways that human cultures have represented and interacted with animals. The prevalence of animals in everyday life and culture, whether as sources of food, clothing, and other raw materials, as means of transportation and energy, as subjects of scientific research, as objects of entertainment and amusement, as inspiration for artistic and literary creativity, as deities or representatives of the divine, or simply as metaphors, attest to the importance of these relationships.
Increased thinking about animals by cultural theorists, historians, anthropologists, sociologists, literary scholars, and ethicists has resulted in a number of interdisciplinary studies addressing the role of animals in shaping human culture, society, and historical experience. Focusing primarily on Western Europe and North America, these collections are largely silent about the place of the animal in Europe's "other" history and culture, namely that of Russia. On the periphery of the European experience, and straddling the land masses of Europe and Asia, Russian culture is marked by preoccupations with issues of identity, marginalization, and uniqueness that extend the basic concern with an "animal other" outlined above to more generalized patterns of self-definition.
"The Other Animals" seeks to bring together a group of scholars to present their work and engage in discussions about the significance of animals in Russian history and culture. The goal of the conference is to identify themes and questions specific to the Russian experience as well as the advantages and limitations of comparative perspectives. The organizers hope that the conference papers and discussions will serve as the foundation for an edited volume as well. The conference will be conducted in workshop format, with panels organized around particular case studies or themes addressed in pre-circulated papers.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to the following: -animals in folklore -animals in religion (particularly Russian Orthodoxy, Judaism, Islam and shamanism) -animals in literature, art, and film -animal attractions, such as zoos, circuses, and trained bears -animal models for medical research and the production of scientific knowledge -animal welfare and protection -biodiversity, and the environment -animals in agriculture and the city -hunting -vegetarianism -warfare -pet keeping -theoretical perspectives on the animal in Russian history and culture
Scholars interested in participating are invited to submit a paper title, abstract (no longer than one page), and a brief CV (including relevant publications) by September 15, 2006. Successful applicants will be notified in November, 2006. Participants' lodging during the conference will be provided by the conference sponsors, Virginia Tech and Bates College. Participants also will receive a subsidy to defray travel expenses.
Please send submissions to Amy Nelson (<mailto:anelson@vt.edu>anelson@vt.edu) and Jane Costlow(<mailto:jcostlow@bates.edu>jcostlow@bates.edu) by September 15, 2006.
CALL FOR PAPERS 2007 Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture (OIEAHC) and Society of Early Americanists (SEA) Conference June 7 to June 10th, 2007 College of William and Mary Williamsburg, Virginia http://www.wm.edu/oieahc/conferences/13thannual/panel_list.cfm)
The Animal in 17th and 18th Century America http://www.wm.edu/oieahc/conferences/13thannual/panel_details.cfm?PanelID=93 Recent work in what is being called critical animal studies has traced the idea of the animal through both the continental and analytic traditions of western philosophy, finding it key to the production of modern and postmodern epistemology and ethics. This panel will explore the category of the animal in the 17th and 18th centuries, when it was coming into focus as a reconsideration of Aristotelian zoology and as one among a host of colonial biopolitical projects. Contributions are hereby solicited on any subject relating to animals and animality in the Americas circa 1600 to 1800. To what extent did writers of the time possess a concept of "the animal" distinct from the narrower "beasts" of early modern period and the broader "nature" of the systematic natural historians? How did the experiences and specimens emerging from the colonies reinforce or trouble contemporary advances in zoology? Do animals function differently from plants in the complex imperial economy of science? Are there alternatives in the period to the machinic and organic models of animality from the preceding and succeeding eras? Papers for this panel might examine wild and domesticated animals, animal communities (beyond beavers and bees), animal gender and reproduction, animal-derived commodities, animal displays (museums and zoos), and animal habitats as they appear in the historical, literary, and environmental record. This panel is co-sponsored by the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment (ASLE). Please submit a one-page proposal and a brief cv to Michael Ziser (mgziser@ucdavis.edu) prior to 15 September 2006.
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