Thinking about Animals in the Age of the Anthropocene.
- 1st ed.
- 1 online resource (272 pages)
- Ecocritical Theory and Practice Series .
- Ecocritical Theory and Practice Series .
Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- I: Beyond Human Eyes -- Chapter One: Held Hostage by the Anthropocene -- Chapter Two: Dangerous Intersubjectivities from Dionysos to Kanzi -- Chapter Three: Animals in a Noisy World -- II: Phenomenology in the Anthropocene -- Chapter Four: A Phenomenological Approach to the Imaginary of Animals -- Chapter Five: Speaking with Animals -- Chapter Six: Desire and/or Need for Life? Toward a Phenomenological Dialectic of the Organism -- III: Beast No More -- Chapter Seven: Understanding the Meaning of Wolf Resurgence, Ecosemiotics, and Landscape Hermeneutics -- Chapter Eight: Behaving like an Animal? -- Chapter Nine: Seeing with Dolphins -- IV: New Beginnings -- Chapter Ten: Out of the Metazoic? -- Chapter Eleven: Dangerous Animals and Our Search for Meaningful Relationships with Nature in the Anthropocene -- Chapter Twelve: Don Quixote's Windmills -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the Contributors.
Thinking about Animals in the Age of the Anthropocene makes connections between the Anthropocene discourse and human-animal studies, thus facilitating further interdisciplinary work on the topic of animals in the Anthropocene.