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61
[Review] Jason Hannan, editor. Meatsplaining: The Animal Agriculture Industry and the Rhetoric of Denial. Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2020. 334 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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62
[Review] Tomaž Grušovnik, Reingard Spannring and Karen Lykke Syse, editors. Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting Our Gaze. Lexington Books 2021. 242 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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63
[Review] Susan Mary Pyke. Animal Visions: Posthumanist Dream Writing. Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019. 314 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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64
Cover Page, Table of Contents, Editorial and Contributor Biographies
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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65
[Review] Marcus Byrne and Helen Lunn. Dance of the Dung Beetles: Their Role in Our Changing World. Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2019. 228 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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66
Empathy, Animals, and Deadly Vices
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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67
[Review] Peter Godfrey-Smith. Metazoa: Animal Life and the Birth of the Mind. New York: Farar, Straus and Giroux, 2020. 336 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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68
[Review] Teya Brooks Pribac. Enter the Animal: Cross-species Perspectives on Grief and Spirituality. Sydney University Press, 2021. 262 pp
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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69
[Review] Deborah Bird Rose. Shimmer: Flying Fox Exuberance in Worlds of Peril. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2022. 240 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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70
[Review] Gordon Meade with Jo-Anne McArthur. Zoospeak. London: Enthusiastic Press, 2020. 126 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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71
[Review] Rosemary-Claire Collard, Animal Traffic . Duke University Press, 2020, xv + 181pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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72
The Contagion of Slow Violence: The Slaughterhouse and COVID-19
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
Abstract: COVID-19 has brought to the fore the violence faced by slaughterhouse workers and those they are charged with slaughtering. This article argues that COVID-19 has wrought an acceleration of the slow violence of state organized race crime (Nixon, Ward), in spreading rapidly through the slaughterhouse and to surrounding racialized communities. We show that zoonotic pandemics are the result of state organized race crime, and that abattoirs are locations of inseparable animal and racial violence. We then analyse how the law and state institutions have positioned slaughterhouse work as essential, contra workers’ claims and general knowledge that meat is an inessential ‘item’. We argue that this demonstrates the mechanics of state organized race crime and accelerates the speed of slow violence, while maintaining its insidious and routine nature. We then consider the #Boycottmeat movement which includes slaughterhouse workers, whom despite having a vested interest in this industry, have advocated for meat boycotts and a transition to plant-based diets as a matter of personal and collective safety.
Keyword: Agricultural and Resource Economics; and Sexuality Studies; Animal Studies; Art and Design; Art Practice; Arts and Humanities; Australian Studies; Communication; COVID-19; Creative Writing; Critical Animal Studies; Digital Humanities; Education; English Language and Literature; Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies; farmed animals; Feminist; Film and Media Studies; Fine Arts; Gender; labour; Legal Studies; Linguistics; meat-packing; Philosophy; Political Science; Public Health; Race; slaughterhouse; slow violence; Social and Behavioral Sciences; Sociology; state organized race crime; Theatre and Performance Studies
URL: https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1510&context=asj
https://ro.uow.edu.au/asj/vol10/iss1/7
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73
A Covid Calendar, in Twelve Animals
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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74
[Review] Penny Johnson. Companions in Conflict: Animals in Occupied Palestine. Melville House Publishing, 2019.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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75
[Review] Dara M. Wald and Anna L. Peterson. Cats and Conservationists: The Debate over Who Owns the Outdoors. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 2020. 153 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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76
[Review] Austin McQuinn. Becoming Audible: Sounding Animality in Performance. Pennsylvania State University Press, 2021. 200 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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77
Covid-19 and Capital: Labour Studies and Nonhuman Animals – A Roundtable Dialogue
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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78
[Review] Felice Cimatti and Carlo Salzani, editors. Animality in Contemporary Italian Philosophy. Palgrave Macmillan Animal Ethics Series. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. 341 pp.
In: Animal Studies Journal (2021)
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79
Shakespeare in Jail. Hamlet in Rebibbia: from Stage to Live Streaming Performances
In: Lingue e Linguaggi; Volume 45 (2021) Special Issue; 239-256 (2021)
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80
Shakespeare (way down) along the Nile.How a pidgin adaptation of Cymbeline gave South Sudan its theatre
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