In The Order of Things, Michel Foucault observed that liberal humanism was ‘sovereign and untroubled’. In an attempt to problematise this assertion, the paper emerges as an artifact of a troubled journey through the sovereign terrain of humanism. It explores and articulates possibilities for a reciprocal ground of animality, a non hegemonic conceptual frontier within which the sovereign terrain of liberal humanism might yield to networks of alliances and reciprocities among human and other-than-human animals. It seeks to locate topography where the conditions of creaturely life may be conceptualised in relational and non anthropocentric terms and to identify alternative ways by which animality might be conceived and represented. The paper m...
This article seeks to address the question of humanity and animality through an elaboration of what...
The work of Michel Foucault is not often considered in animal ethics discussions, but I believe that...
Is it possible to speak of a Husserlian phenomenology of the animal? In his phenomenological analyse...
The concerns of this paper have been precipitated by the chauvinistic humanism of the western philo...
The paper seeks articulate possibilities for a reciprocal ground of animality, a non hegemonic conce...
The present paper represents a phenomenological reflexion on the question of animality. Drawing from...
Philosophy is perhaps all too human and excludes the non-human Other from its epistemic humano-spher...
The diversity of scholarly contributions to the interdisciplinary fields of animal studies and posth...
Written as a travelogue, and employing geospatial metaphors, the paper is an exploration of animalit...
In Chapter 16, “The Nature of Animality,” Michael Lundblad explores how questions of animal (and hum...
A critical view on the relationships between humans and animals has become salient both within the p...
A critical view on the relationships between humans and animals has become salient both within the p...
Bisclavret and Yonec — two lais by Marie de France — feature instances of human/animal metamorphosis...
Drawing upon Husserl and Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological constitution of the Other through Einfühlu...
There is congruence between Nietzsche’s philosophy of life and the biopolitical philosophy of Giorgi...
This article seeks to address the question of humanity and animality through an elaboration of what...
The work of Michel Foucault is not often considered in animal ethics discussions, but I believe that...
Is it possible to speak of a Husserlian phenomenology of the animal? In his phenomenological analyse...
The concerns of this paper have been precipitated by the chauvinistic humanism of the western philo...
The paper seeks articulate possibilities for a reciprocal ground of animality, a non hegemonic conce...
The present paper represents a phenomenological reflexion on the question of animality. Drawing from...
Philosophy is perhaps all too human and excludes the non-human Other from its epistemic humano-spher...
The diversity of scholarly contributions to the interdisciplinary fields of animal studies and posth...
Written as a travelogue, and employing geospatial metaphors, the paper is an exploration of animalit...
In Chapter 16, “The Nature of Animality,” Michael Lundblad explores how questions of animal (and hum...
A critical view on the relationships between humans and animals has become salient both within the p...
A critical view on the relationships between humans and animals has become salient both within the p...
Bisclavret and Yonec — two lais by Marie de France — feature instances of human/animal metamorphosis...
Drawing upon Husserl and Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological constitution of the Other through Einfühlu...
There is congruence between Nietzsche’s philosophy of life and the biopolitical philosophy of Giorgi...
This article seeks to address the question of humanity and animality through an elaboration of what...
The work of Michel Foucault is not often considered in animal ethics discussions, but I believe that...
Is it possible to speak of a Husserlian phenomenology of the animal? In his phenomenological analyse...