This paper explores various ways in which contemporary British English depicts degrees of animacy among nonhuman animals, and demonstrates the anthropocentric qualities of much discourse about animals. The first section reviews discussions of animacy in relevant research literature, highlighting how these often take for granted a categorical distinction between humans and other animals, before demonstrating how both corpus-assisted approaches to discourse analysis and developments in the analysis of animacy point to a more complex picture. The second section discusses the implications of recent work in social theory for understanding organisms, and their degrees of animacy, from the perspective of networks rather than hierarchies. The third...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
Today, the Western world is extensively centred around human language and the natural sciences. The ...
Abstract Drawing on analyses of scientific knowledge and language from Foucault and Lyotard, this ar...
There is growing consensus among animal studies scholars that fictional representations of animals, ...
This article presents an analysis of data from over 200 accounts of, and responses to questions abou...
This article presents an analysis of data from over 200 accounts of, and responses to questions abou...
Human language inevitably depicts the world from a human point of view. This article briefly reviews...
This paper explores the intersection of film studies and critical animal studies in its examination ...
The assertion of the centrality and supremacy of man, or rather, of the idea(l) of humanity, during ...
This commentary emphasizes Broom’s (2014) attack on “the widely stated human prejudices” that preven...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
In this thesis I pursue a critical summary of the so-called "talking animals" projects, wherein the ...
Animal Narratology interrogates what it means to narrate, to speak—speak for, on behalf of—and to vo...
This dissertation identifies and criticises a fundamental characteristic of the philosophical discou...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
Today, the Western world is extensively centred around human language and the natural sciences. The ...
Abstract Drawing on analyses of scientific knowledge and language from Foucault and Lyotard, this ar...
There is growing consensus among animal studies scholars that fictional representations of animals, ...
This article presents an analysis of data from over 200 accounts of, and responses to questions abou...
This article presents an analysis of data from over 200 accounts of, and responses to questions abou...
Human language inevitably depicts the world from a human point of view. This article briefly reviews...
This paper explores the intersection of film studies and critical animal studies in its examination ...
The assertion of the centrality and supremacy of man, or rather, of the idea(l) of humanity, during ...
This commentary emphasizes Broom’s (2014) attack on “the widely stated human prejudices” that preven...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
In this thesis I pursue a critical summary of the so-called "talking animals" projects, wherein the ...
Animal Narratology interrogates what it means to narrate, to speak—speak for, on behalf of—and to vo...
This dissertation identifies and criticises a fundamental characteristic of the philosophical discou...
Representing a nonhuman animal consciousness in literature is problematic, because we human animals ...
Today, the Western world is extensively centred around human language and the natural sciences. The ...
Abstract Drawing on analyses of scientific knowledge and language from Foucault and Lyotard, this ar...