Repository | Series | Book | Chapter
Does zoosemiotics have an ethical agenda?
pp. 291-325
Abstract
How widely separated is a lavishly presented roast hog served in a fancy restaurant from a sanitized, shrink-wrapped piece of chicken breast bought in a supermarket? They might appear to be aesthetic and cultural opposites, but at the same time they are both commercial presentations of a dead animal as a product. What are, if any, the common denominators between these two (and of course many other) instances of human-other animal relationship? Are the ethical aspects of this relationship a topic of interest for zoosemiotics?
Publication details
Published in:
Martinelli Dario (2010) A critical companion to zoosemiotics: people, paths, ideas. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 291-325
DOI: 10.1007/978-90-481-9249-6_5
Full citation:
Martinelli Dario (2010) Does zoosemiotics have an ethical agenda?, In: A critical companion to zoosemiotics, Dordrecht, Springer, 291–325.