Latest publications by our members

Thom van Dooren has co-edited a special issue of Environmental Humanities entitled ‘Multispecies Studies’, along with Ursula Munster, Eben Kirksey, Deborah Bird Rose, Matthew Chrulew and Anna Tsing.  Articles include: Thom van Dooren, Eben Kirskey, and Ursula Münster: ‘Multispecies Studies: Cultivating Arts of Attentiveness’, Environmental Humanities 8 (1) June 2016; and Thom van Dooren and […]

New Edition of the Animal Studies Journal now available

The latest edition of the Animal Studies Journal was initially conceived by associate editor Sally Borrell who framed the call for papers with a quote from Margaret Atwood’s novel Oryx and Crake: Can a single ant be said to be alive in any meaningful sense of the word or does it only have relevance in […]

Latest publications by our members

Jill Bough, 2016. ‘Our stubborn prejudice about donkeys is shifting as they protect Australia’s sheep from wild dogs’, Australian Zoologist, 38 (1): 17-25. Thom van Dooren, 2016. ‘The Unwelcome Crows: Hospitality in the Anthropocene’, Angelaki:Journal of the Theoretical Humanities 21 (2): 193-212. Dinesh Joseph Wadiwel, 2016. ‘Like One Who is Bringing his Own Hide to […]

Call for papers – Antennae CFP: Animals and Film

The centrality of animals to the history of film, and the particular powers and properties of the animal image on film require no introduction. This issue of Antennae will be entirely dedicated to this subject.

An Art for the Other: The Animal in Philosophy and Art

In their witty and polemical cultural analysis, art and architecture historian Valentina Sonzogni and philosopher Leonardo Caffo explore a myriad of visual, ethical, and cultural issues relating to the idea of animality.

Special Edition of NECSUS European Journal of Media Studies – Spring 2015 – Animals

Special Edition of NECSUS European Journal of Media Studies – Spring 2015 – Animals Guest edited by Professor Barbara Creed and Maarten Reesink – this edition of NECSUS features the following articles: Animals, images, anthropocentrism by Barbara Creed and Maarten Reesink Why not look at animals? by Anat Pick When Lulu met the Centaur: Photographic […]

Animal Studies Journal

Scholars from all areas of human-animal studies are welcome to submit an original article to be considered for publication in ASJ.

THE MANAGEMENT OF INSECTS IN RECREATION AND TOURISM

Edited by Raynald Harvey Lemelin. Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Insects such as cockroaches, mosquitoes and bed-bugs are usually not highly sought amongst travellers or recreationists, yet each year, collectors, butterfly enthusiasts, dragonfly-hunters and apiarists collect, visit, document and raise insects for recreational purposes.