CRITICAL ANIMAL STUDIES

Academic year
2021/2022 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
CRITICAL ANIMAL STUDIES
Course code
LMH390 (AF:360974 AR:189700)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
6
Degree level
Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
Educational sector code
SPS/08
Period
2nd Semester
Course year
1
Where
VENEZIA
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
Critical Animal Studies (CAS) is a highly interdisciplinary field of studies and practices born recently to counter the growing depoliticization of Human-Animal Studies from an eco-systemic perspective. The main objectives of the CAS are: tackle animal oppression and the power relations that discriminate the living by elaborating a critique of mainstream animal studies and the systems of oppression in force; analyze the relationships between humans and non-humans in the nature-culture continuum; promote resistance and regeneration practices for human and non-human animals together.
The course deals with CAS authors, themes, methods and tools by deepening the animal question through its links with class, ethnicity, gender and ability; the abuses and violence of colonialist and extractivist practices that speciesism and all connected forms of discrimination convey and support; the intersectional, decolonial and transcultural critiques to the imaginary and narratives of the Anthropocene
- Address the animal question in its ecosystemic and intersectional dimension
- Understand the language, ideology, practices and institutions that convey and support speciesism
- Develop a critique of the positioning starting from a reflective methodology
- Promote a multi-species society against all forms of discrimination.
No prerequisites are needed.
- From human to compost: theoretical and methodological frameworks.
- Critical Animal Studies and Human-Animal Studies: deconstruction and reconstruction of positionings
- Welfarism, Animalism rights, Political antispeciesism
- The links between theories and practices
- Animal and gender issues
- Nature’s queer performativity
- Capitalism and the animal-industrial circuit: animal husbandry, biotechnologies, food, territories
- Racism and animalization: feminist and decolonial approaches
- We are all interdependent: disabilities, practices of care, sympoiesis.
Anthony Nocella II & Amber George (eds.), Intersectionality of Critical Animal Studies. A Historical Collection, Peter Lang, New York 2019.
Lori Gruen (ed), Critical Terms for Animal Studies, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2018 (suggested).

Additional texts and documents (detailed reading list) in the class space in Moodle.
See the detailed syllabus of the course that will be available on Moodle for the differentiation of the tests between attending and non-attending students. To be defined based on the number of participants in the course.
Lectures, seminars by external experts and attending students, group work.
English
Students are required to read the assigned texts before class in which they will be discussed and on the basis of the schedule provided. Laptops will be used exclusively for assigned activities. The use of mobile phones is not allowed in class except for motivated reasons previously agreed with the teacher.
Please note that for attending students, participation is part of the final evaluation.

Students in the classroom will be respectful of each other and everyone's participation will be guaranteed. This class promotes accountability, equality, freedom of expression and collaboration. No kind of discrimination, verbal or otherwise, will be allowed in the classroom. For specific needs, or problems that occur in class, students are asked to contact me privately.
written and oral

This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Natural capital and environmental quality" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development

Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 02/12/2021