animal
Decolonizing Extinction 豆瓣
作者: Juno Salazar Parreñas Duke University Press Books 2018 - 8
In Decolonizing Extinction Juno Salazar Parreñas ethnographically traces the ways in which colonialism, decolonization, and indigeneity shape relations that form more-than-human worlds at orangutan rehabilitation centers on Borneo. Parreñas tells the interweaving stories of wildlife workers and the centers' endangered animals while demonstrating the inseparability of risk and futurity from orangutan care. Drawing on anthropology, primatology, Southeast Asian history, gender studies, queer theory, and science and technology studies, Parreñas suggests that examining workers’ care for these semi-wild apes can serve as a basis for cultivating mutual but unequal vulnerability in an era of annihilation. Only by considering rehabilitation from perspectives thus far ignored, Parreñas contends, could conservation biology turn away from ultimately violent investments in population growth and embrace a feminist sense of welfare, even if it means experiencing loss and pain.
2022年12月27日 已读
东南亚大猩猩,几个有趣的点:1. 结尾作者呼吁要拥抱vulnerability 2. 结尾猩猩和饲养员的命名很有趣
_ animal posthuman
Animacies 豆瓣
作者: Mel Y. Chen Duke University Press Books 2012 - 7
In Animacies, Mel Y. Chen draws on recent debates about sexuality, race, and affect to examine how matter that is considered insensate, immobile, or deathly, animates cultural lives. Toward that end, Chen investigates the blurry division between the living and the dead, or that which is beyond the human or animal. Within the field of linguistics, animacy has been described variously as a quality of agency, awareness, mobility, sentience, or liveness. Chen turns to cognitive linguistics to stress how language habitually differentiates the animate and the inanimate. Expanding this construct, Chen argues that animacy undergirds much that is pressing and indeed volatile in contemporary culture, from animal rights debates to biosecurity concerns. Chen's book is the first to bring the concept of animacy together with queer of color scholarship, critical animal studies, and disability theory. Through analyses of dehumanizing insults, the meanings of queerness, animal protagonists in recent Asian/American art and film, the lead toy panic in 2007, and the social lives of environmental illness, Animacies illuminates a hierarchical politics infused by race, sexuality, and ability. In this groundbreaking book, Chen rethinks the criteria governing agency and receptivity, health and toxicity, productivity and stillness - and demonstrates how attention to the affective charge of matter challenges commonsense orderings of the world.
2022年7月27日 已读
读了intro, chap 3&4, 很想读words的部分。据说lead metal很惊艳?也许之后有机会读吧,要暂时告别了。总体来说,这本书提供了一个queer, race, animal, disability的连接点,第三章讲很多动物话语里隐藏的性别叙事,文本细读得不错;第四章讲transness,跨物种的不停转化,进而联系到Delueze "bodies without organs." 感觉到有进一步思考的空间。作者提出一种可能性,就是突破物种分类,去追寻那个变幻未知的未来, which should have been borrowed by Halberstam (also the series editor) in her invention of wildness.
animal queer