Arguments about Animal Ethics
Editat de Greg Goodale, Jason Edward Black Contribuţii de Wendy Atkins-Sayre, Renee S. Besel, Richard D. Besel, Carrie Packwood Freeman, Laura K. Hahn, Brett Lunceford, Patricia Malesh, Sabrina Marsh, Jane Bloodworth Rowe, Professor Mary Trachselen Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 mar 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780739192832
ISBN-10: 0739192833
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 231 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0739192833
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 231 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1 Ch 1: Rhetoric and "Animals": A Long History and Brief Introduction
Part 2 Part 1: Rhetorical Theory at the Human/Nonhuman Animal Boundary
Chapter 3 Ch. 2: Embracing Humanimality: Deconstructing the Human/Animal Dichotomy
Chapter 4 Ch. 3: How to Do Things Without Words: Whisperers as Rustic Authorities on Interspecies Dialogue
Chapter 5 Ch. 4: The Battle Within: Understanding the Persuasive Affect of Internal Rhetorics in the Ethical Vegetarian/Vegan Movement
Part 6 Part 2: Critiques of Animal Ethics Rhetoric
Chapter 7 Ch. 5: I'm Too Sexy for Your Movement: An Analysis of the Failure of the Animal Rights Movement to Promote Vegetarianism
Chapter 8 Ch. 6: PeTA and the Rhetoric of Nude Protest
Chapter 9 Ch. 7: Biting Back at the Empire: The Anti-Greyhound Racing Movement's Decolonizing Rhetoric as a Countermand to the Dog Racing Industry
Part 10 Part 3: Critiques of Animal Management Rhetoric
Chapter 11 Ch. 8: The Biomedical Research Industry and the End of Scientific Revolutions
Chapter 12 Ch. 9: Protection from "Animal Rights Lunatics": The Center for Consumer Freedom and Animal Rights Rhetoric
Chapter 13 Ch. 10: Whale Wars and the Public Screen: Mediating Animal Ethics in Violent Times
Part 14 Part 4: A Critique of Animal Ethics and Animal Management Rhetoric
Chapter 15 Ch. 11: Feral Horses: Logos, Pathos and the Definition of Christian Dominion
Part 2 Part 1: Rhetorical Theory at the Human/Nonhuman Animal Boundary
Chapter 3 Ch. 2: Embracing Humanimality: Deconstructing the Human/Animal Dichotomy
Chapter 4 Ch. 3: How to Do Things Without Words: Whisperers as Rustic Authorities on Interspecies Dialogue
Chapter 5 Ch. 4: The Battle Within: Understanding the Persuasive Affect of Internal Rhetorics in the Ethical Vegetarian/Vegan Movement
Part 6 Part 2: Critiques of Animal Ethics Rhetoric
Chapter 7 Ch. 5: I'm Too Sexy for Your Movement: An Analysis of the Failure of the Animal Rights Movement to Promote Vegetarianism
Chapter 8 Ch. 6: PeTA and the Rhetoric of Nude Protest
Chapter 9 Ch. 7: Biting Back at the Empire: The Anti-Greyhound Racing Movement's Decolonizing Rhetoric as a Countermand to the Dog Racing Industry
Part 10 Part 3: Critiques of Animal Management Rhetoric
Chapter 11 Ch. 8: The Biomedical Research Industry and the End of Scientific Revolutions
Chapter 12 Ch. 9: Protection from "Animal Rights Lunatics": The Center for Consumer Freedom and Animal Rights Rhetoric
Chapter 13 Ch. 10: Whale Wars and the Public Screen: Mediating Animal Ethics in Violent Times
Part 14 Part 4: A Critique of Animal Ethics and Animal Management Rhetoric
Chapter 15 Ch. 11: Feral Horses: Logos, Pathos and the Definition of Christian Dominion
Recenzii
Recommended.
Navigating the relationships, distinctions, and commonalities between human and nonhuman animals is an aporia that spans human history from our more banal moments (i.e., implicating what we eat or wear everyday) to our more spectacular (i.e., involving protests or media events). Goodale and Black's collection reminds us that taking the stakes of these relations seriously requires a robust sense of rhetorical critique that accounts for ethics, affect, ethos, pathos, and logos across a variety of media, forums, and experiences. This volume promises to provoke meaningful conversations that will help stretch our understanding of animal rights, ethics, social change, and rhetoric.
Navigating the relationships, distinctions, and commonalities between human and nonhuman animals is an aporia that spans human history from our more banal moments (i.e., implicating what we eat or wear everyday) to our more spectacular (i.e., involving protests or media events). Goodale and Black's collection reminds us that taking the stakes of these relations seriously requires a robust sense of rhetorical critique that accounts for ethics, affect, ethos, pathos, and logos across a variety of media, forums, and experiences. This volume promises to provoke meaningful conversations that will help stretch our understanding of animal rights, ethics, social change, and rhetoric.