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Dog Politics

In this brilliant and detailed text, Mariam Motamedi Fraser offers an overdue and unflinching intervention into the study of "species" as a political category, its implicit anthropocentricism, and attendant material and epistemic violence. Importantly, Dog politics points readers towards a fundamental and critical question for animal studies and posthumanism: "What does it mean to actually work towards freedom for the animals we are entangled with?"' Dinesh Wadiwel, Associate Professor, University of Sydney Everywhere dogs are found, they are stitched into human hearts. But are humans stitched into theirs? Countless celebrations of 'the dog-human bond' suggest that they are. Yet 'the bond' does not always come easily to dogs. Dog politics seeks to denaturalise, in different ways, dogs' 'species story, ' the scientific story that claims that being with humans somehow constitutes dogs' evolutionary destiny. This book asks what evidence exists for this story, what choices dogs have but to go along with it, and what expectations, demands and burdens it places on dogs, on a daily basis. In doing so, it offers an unfamiliar and discomforting account of the lives of domesticated dogs today. As well as offering a rich empirical analysis of conceptions of dogs in science, Dog politics uses dogs' species story as the prism through which to refract a number of topics of contemporary significance. These include: how the relations between animal behaviours and species identities are established in theory and in practice, how the histories of concepts of 'race' and of species overlap and differ over time, with enduring implications today, and how the reification and exploitation of dogs' perceived relationality with humans can potentially transform an ethics of engagement into a hostile politics. Above all, Dog politics shows how species stories erase the singular animal as a figure of theoretical, methodological, ethical and political value.

CHF 163.00

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ISBN 9781526174802
Sprache eng
Cover Fester Einband
Verlag Manchester University Press
Jahr 20240130

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