The Philosophical Animal: On Zoopoetics and Interspecies Cosmopolitanism
(State University of New York Press, 2024)
266 pages
Description
Humans are animals who fictionalize other animals to asse their "humanness." We are philosophical animals who philosophize about our humanity by projecting images onto a mirror about other animals. Spanning literature, philosophy, and ethics, the thread uniting The Philosophical Animal is the bestiary and how it continues to inform our imaginings. Beginning with an exploration of animals and women in the literary work of Coetzee, famous for his book on The Lives of Animals, Eduardo Mendieta then dives into the genre of bestiaries in order to investigate the relation between humanity and animality. From there he approaches the works of Derrida and Habermas from the standpoint of genetic engineering and animal studies. While we have intensely modified many species genetically, we have not done this to ourselves. Why? Finally, Mendieta deals with the political and ethical implications suggested by this question before ending on an autobiographical note about growing up around so-called animals, and in particular horses.
Contents [Open access]
Introduction: The Poetic Species
I. Ceasing to Be Animal
1: Zoopoetics: Coetzee’s Animals and Philosophy
2: Political Bestiary: On the Uses of Violence
3: Heidegger’s Bestiary: The Speechless and Unhistorical Animal
II. Not Yet Human
4: Habermas on Human Cloning: The Debate on the Future of the Species
5: Communicative Freedom and Genetic Engineering
6: We Have Never Been Human, or How We Lost Our Humanity
III. Toward a Companion Species Ethics
7: Animal Is to Kantianism As Jew Is to Fascism: Adorno’s Bestiary
8: Interspecies Cosmopolitanism
9: Bestiaries of Extinction: Anthropodicy or Anthropohippology
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