Dear all

Please find attached information on a seminar by Matthew Chrulew at UNSW, 
co-hosted by philosophy and environmental humanities.

Heini Hediger and the significance of zoo biology in the Anthropocene
Matthew Chrulew
Centre for Culture and Technology | Curtin University

Thursday 1 June 2017 | 4:00-5:30pm
Morven Brown Building, Room 209 | UNSW, Kensington Campus


When philosophy and cultural theory have delved into the marginal subfield of 
zoo biology, it has usually been only to chastise it for turning wild animals 
into humanised artifacts. Rarely has it been asked what this science of mutual 
acclimatisation might have to say on wider issues. Yet today when the 
humanities are struggling with questions of human relations to animals and the 
environment, amid their intensification and mutual transformation in the 
Anthropocene, the knowledge, techniques, practices and even wisdom developed 
within this domain are worthy of sustained attention. Taking zoo biology 
seriously as a site of experimentation, however flawed, in multispecies 
relationships, this paper will stake a claim for the wider cultural and 
philosophical significance of the work of the midtwentieth

century Swiss zoo director Heini Hediger.


Matthew Chrulew is a DECRA Research Fellow in the Centre for Culture and 
Technology at Curtin University. Recent publications included the edited 
collections Foucault and Animals (Brill, 2016, with Dinesh Wadiwel) and 
Extinction Studies (Columbia, 2017, with Deborah Bird Rose and Thom van 
Dooren). Matthew is also an Associate Editor of the journal Environmental 
Humanities (Duke).


For further information please contact Paul Patton 
(p...@unsw.edu.au<mailto:p...@unsw.edu.au>)

or Thom van Dooren (t.van.doo...@unsw.edu.au<mailto:t.van.doo...@unsw.edu.au>)

Joint Philosophy/Environmental Humanities Seminar

Heini Hediger and the significance of

zoo biology in the Anthropocene


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