Thinking about Animals in the Age of the Anthropocene makes connections between the Anthropocene discourse and human-animal studies, thus facilitating further interdisciplinary work on the topic of animals in the Anthropocene.
Thinking about Animals in the Age of the Anthropocene makes connections between the Anthropocene discourse and human-animal studies, thus facilitating further interdisciplinary work on the topic of animals in the Anthropocene.
Edited by Morten Tønnessen; Kristin Armstrong Oma and Silver Rattasepp - Contributions by Almo Farina; Carlo Brentari; Katharine Dow; Martin Drenthen; Annabelle Dufourcq; Peter Gaitsch; Gisela Kaplan; Eva Meijer; Susan M. Rustick; Bronislaw Szerszynski; M
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Introduction: Once upon a Time in the Anthropocene Morten Tønnessen & Kristin Armstrong Oma Part I: Beyond Human Eyes Chapter 1: Held Hostage by the Anthropocene Susan M. Rustick Chapter 2: Dangerous Intersubjectivities from Dionysos to Kanzi Louise Westling Chapter 3: Animals in a Noisy World Almo Farina Part II: Phenomenology in the Anthropocene Chapter 4: A Phenomenological Approach to the Imaginary of Animals Annabelle Dufourcq Chapter 5: Speaking with Animals: Philosophical Interspecies Investigations Eva Meijer Chapter 6: Desire and/or Need for Life? Towards a Phenomenological Dialectic of the Organism Sebastjan Vörös & Peter Gaitsch Part III: Beast No More Chapter 7: Understanding the Meaning of Wolf Resurgence, Ecosemiotics, and Landscape Hermeneutics Martin Drenthen Chapter 8: Behaving like an Animal? Some Implications of the Philosophical Debate on the Animality in Man Carlo Brentari Chapter 9: Seeing with Dolphins: Reflections on the Salience of Cetaceans Katharine Dow Part IV: New Beginnings Chapter 10: Out of the Metazoic? Animals as a Transitional Form in Planetary Evolution Bronislaw Szerszynski Chapter 11: Dangerous Animals and Our Search for Meaningful Relationships with Nature in the Anthropocene Mateusz Tokarski Chapter 12: Don Quixote's Windmills Gisela Kaplan About the Contributors Index
Acknowledgments Introduction: Once upon a Time in the Anthropocene Morten Tønnessen & Kristin Armstrong Oma Part I: Beyond Human Eyes Chapter 1: Held Hostage by the Anthropocene Susan M. Rustick Chapter 2: Dangerous Intersubjectivities from Dionysos to Kanzi Louise Westling Chapter 3: Animals in a Noisy World Almo Farina Part II: Phenomenology in the Anthropocene Chapter 4: A Phenomenological Approach to the Imaginary of Animals Annabelle Dufourcq Chapter 5: Speaking with Animals: Philosophical Interspecies Investigations Eva Meijer Chapter 6: Desire and/or Need for Life? Towards a Phenomenological Dialectic of the Organism Sebastjan Vörös & Peter Gaitsch Part III: Beast No More Chapter 7: Understanding the Meaning of Wolf Resurgence, Ecosemiotics, and Landscape Hermeneutics Martin Drenthen Chapter 8: Behaving like an Animal? Some Implications of the Philosophical Debate on the Animality in Man Carlo Brentari Chapter 9: Seeing with Dolphins: Reflections on the Salience of Cetaceans Katharine Dow Part IV: New Beginnings Chapter 10: Out of the Metazoic? Animals as a Transitional Form in Planetary Evolution Bronislaw Szerszynski Chapter 11: Dangerous Animals and Our Search for Meaningful Relationships with Nature in the Anthropocene Mateusz Tokarski Chapter 12: Don Quixote's Windmills Gisela Kaplan About the Contributors Index
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