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The Rhetoric of Human-Animal Relations

Workshop, Nature and the natural (30.01.12): The purpose of this workshop is to investigate the rhetoric that reaches beyond the human sphere. If humans are perhaps the only species capable of rhetoric, they are certainly not the only species affected by it. In fact, rhetoric creates the space within which our everyday practices with other beings take place. Rhetoric thus connects the philosophical "question of the animal" with our everyday interactions with animals; in both cases, the salient issue is that – and how – words and other rhetorical means have consequences.

Photo: Colourbox.no

Photo: Colourbox.no

The Rhetoric of Human-Animal Relations

Workshop at the University of Oslo, May 29-30, 2012

With rhetoric, we make realities. And despite the complaint that humans are “a species which has at last been isolated” (Berger), the realities that humans create with rhetoric are not exclusively human. The purpose of this workshop is to investigate the rhetoric that reaches beyond the human sphere.

In some of its various definitions, rhetoric refers either to “the art of persuasion,” to a continuous process of “identification,” or to an “articulation” that tries to fix meaning in a world where no such meaning is given. In all cases, it appears that rhetoric is something humans perform with and on each other. But if humans are perhaps the only species capable of rhetoric, they are certainly not the only species affected by it. In fact, rhetoric creates the space within which our everyday practices with other beings take place. Rhetoric thus connects the philosophical “question of the animal” with our everyday interactions with animals; in both cases, the salient issue is that – and how – words and other rhetorical means have consequences.

In this workshop, we will focus on questions like these:

  • How do we use rhetoric to form, understand, explain, discuss, ponder, justify, challenge, and criticize human-animal practices?
  • How do we rhetorically create, uphold, and challenge the norms that are supposed to guide our behavior towards nonhumans?
  • How do visual and verbal rhetorics shape human-animal relations in theory as well as in practice?
  • Finally, how does interacting with animals inspire development of other rhetorics (olfactory, tactile, performative, etc.)?

Please direct any questions to kristian.bjorkdahl@sum.uio.no.

Confirmed keynote speakers:
Susan McHugh, University of New England
Mara Miele, Cardiff University

Go to the conference website

Organiser: Kristian Bjørkdahl.

This event is supported by
The Ethics Programme
Centre for Development and the Environment
Kultrans - Nature and the natural

Publisert 10. jan. 2012 11:06 - Sist endret 6. feb. 2012 07:18