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
Morten Tønnessen is associate professor of philosophy at University
of Stavanger.
Kristin Armstrong Oma is associate professor of archaeology at the
department of cultural heritage, Museum of Archaeology, University
of Stavanger.
Silver Rattasepp is a junior researcher in the Department of
Semiotics at University of Tartu.
This book, a collection of a dozen scholarly chapters that address
various aspects of the anthropocene and human/animal relationships,
is fascinating…. I think anyone in an animal studies programs will
see this book as a ‘must read,’ because it speaks to the challenges
animal rights activists face in raising awareness of animal
issues.
*EcoLit Books*
In the throes of ecological crisis, it is heartening to encounter
an ensemble of essayists determined to critique and remediate human
violence (both literal and semiotic) against other animals.
Thinking about Animals in the Age of the
Anthropocene offers intricately detailed pathways toward
empathetic interspecies connections that resist the isolated,
narcissistic arrogance of anthropocentrism.
*Randy Malamud, Professor of English, Georgia State University*
This important collection probes the dangers of the Anthropocene
beyond the human perspective. If other animal species are not
our slaves but co-authors of our planetary lives, what becomes of
nature and of that species once upon a time known as man?
These provocative essays draw on a rich diversity of
disciplines to address the looming crisis.
*Cynthia Willett, Author of Maternal Ethics and Other Slave
Moralities*
The ramifications of climate change are already creating a strange,
precarious world for all life on Earth, where the challenges of the
Anthropocene extend far beyond the controversies of its labeling by
the human animals that have so influenced this moment in geologic
time. Examining the roles humans have played in evolving global
ecosystems and toward specific animals, this ambitious and
provocative collection explores some of the overlapping and
interwoven issues of species to argue for human humility and
modesty as we all face an uncertain future. This evocative
collection comes just at the right time.
*Sarah McFarland, Northwestern State University*
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