THANK YOU FOR AN EXCELLENT CONFERENCE!
Recordings of the keynote proceedings will be available soon.
Recordings of the keynote proceedings will be available soon.
ANIMALHOUSE: ANIMALS AND THEIR ENVIRONS
The relationship between animals and their environs has become one of the paramount political concerns of our time. A recent UN Report asserts that climate change currently threatens one million plant and animal species with extinction and that this declining biodiversity is already taking its toll on human life. While a particular urgency motivates current discussions of animate life and its habitat, examining this relationship has yielded significant philosophical development throughout the 20th century. Consider, for instance, how Jakob von Uexküll’s concept of the umwelt influenced Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Deleuze; or, consider Hans Jonas’s assertion that standard ethical paradigms falter insofar as they fail to recognize our responsibility to the environment; or, consider the posthumanist tradition that aims to unsettle rigid distinctions between “the” human, “the” animal, and their proper domains. This conference seeks to develop and examine these traditions, further interrogating the relation of these two shifting concepts: the animal and its environs.
Participants will question if and how philosophy’s treatment of animals and their environs can help us make sense of our current situation. How have considerations of habitat, dominion, and domesticity determined the (ethical, ontological, rhetorical) status of animals? Conversely, how have presuppositions about “the animal” informed what environs are proper to “man”? What would it mean for an animal to be “at home” in the current world? Can philosophical approaches to animals be more than an instrumentalizing procedure? How will climate change alter not only the vitality of a species but the very grounds from which it lays claim to a home?
The conference is open to the public.
For any additional questions, please email [email protected]
Participants will question if and how philosophy’s treatment of animals and their environs can help us make sense of our current situation. How have considerations of habitat, dominion, and domesticity determined the (ethical, ontological, rhetorical) status of animals? Conversely, how have presuppositions about “the animal” informed what environs are proper to “man”? What would it mean for an animal to be “at home” in the current world? Can philosophical approaches to animals be more than an instrumentalizing procedure? How will climate change alter not only the vitality of a species but the very grounds from which it lays claim to a home?
The conference is open to the public.
For any additional questions, please email [email protected]
Conference support provided by: |
Graduate Faculty Student Senate | NSSR Dean's Office