Are humans at war with nonhuman animals, either literally or metaphorically? What might it mean for human-animal studies – and for human-animal relations – to say so? Responding to these questions with considerable eloquence and by drawing upon a wide range of references – including 19thcentury theories of war, Continental theory, actor-network theory, and animal rights philosophy – Dinesh Wadiwel produces an argument that surprises, provokes and enlightens
Several recent studies have critically analyzed discourses involved in the oppression and exploitati...
[Review] Susan McHugh. Love in a Time of Slaughters: Human-Animal Stories Against Genocide and Extin...
Animal Ethos. What is that? This heading on its own is a puzzle. Taken together with the subheading ...
Are humans at war with nonhuman animals, either literally or metaphorically? What might it mean for ...
Adopting the Clausewitzean (1968) argument that the aim of war is the complete domination of the ‘op...
War is harmful to animals, but few have considered how such harm should affect assessments of the ju...
Animals have been almost entirely absent from scholarly appraisals of the ethics of war. Just-war th...
Ethologists have observed that some animals use organised violence against members of their own spec...
The main purposes of this article are to assess whether the existing rules of the law of armed confl...
James Hevia’s very accomplished history, Animal Labor and Colonial Warfare, actually contains more t...
Animal Studies Journal 2021 10(1): [Review] Penny Johnson. Companions in Conflict: Animals in Occupi...
Review of Animals and War: Studies of Europe and North America, edited by Ryan Hediger
[Review] Dominic O’Key. Creaturely Forms in Contemporary Literature: Narrating the War Against Anima...
The international war on drugs has been roundly criticised by drug reformers as economically costly,...
“We are the only people in this world who are living under such total occupation. Israel sees us as ...
Several recent studies have critically analyzed discourses involved in the oppression and exploitati...
[Review] Susan McHugh. Love in a Time of Slaughters: Human-Animal Stories Against Genocide and Extin...
Animal Ethos. What is that? This heading on its own is a puzzle. Taken together with the subheading ...
Are humans at war with nonhuman animals, either literally or metaphorically? What might it mean for ...
Adopting the Clausewitzean (1968) argument that the aim of war is the complete domination of the ‘op...
War is harmful to animals, but few have considered how such harm should affect assessments of the ju...
Animals have been almost entirely absent from scholarly appraisals of the ethics of war. Just-war th...
Ethologists have observed that some animals use organised violence against members of their own spec...
The main purposes of this article are to assess whether the existing rules of the law of armed confl...
James Hevia’s very accomplished history, Animal Labor and Colonial Warfare, actually contains more t...
Animal Studies Journal 2021 10(1): [Review] Penny Johnson. Companions in Conflict: Animals in Occupi...
Review of Animals and War: Studies of Europe and North America, edited by Ryan Hediger
[Review] Dominic O’Key. Creaturely Forms in Contemporary Literature: Narrating the War Against Anima...
The international war on drugs has been roundly criticised by drug reformers as economically costly,...
“We are the only people in this world who are living under such total occupation. Israel sees us as ...
Several recent studies have critically analyzed discourses involved in the oppression and exploitati...
[Review] Susan McHugh. Love in a Time of Slaughters: Human-Animal Stories Against Genocide and Extin...
Animal Ethos. What is that? This heading on its own is a puzzle. Taken together with the subheading ...