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Call for Papers—Animals and the Left,29 June 2018, New York
University
<https://networks.h-net.org/user/login?destination=node/1354295>
byTroy Vettese
One-Day Workshop, NYU Animal Studies
29 June 2018, New York City
Organisers: Sunaura Taylor (NYU), Troy Vettese (NYU), and Alyssa
Battistoni (Yale)
In 1917 Rosa Luxemburg wrote to a friend from her prison cell in Breslau:
The hide of a buffalo is proverbial for its toughness and thickness, but
this tough skin had been broken. During the unloading, all the animals
stood there, quite still, exhausted, and the one that was bleeding kept
staring into the empty space in front of him with an expression on his
black face and in his soft, black eyes like an abused child. It was
precisely the expression of a child that has been punished and doesn’t
know why or what for, doesn’t know how to get away from this torment and
raw violence.
She, however, was far from the only revolutionary to ponder the plight
of animals within broader systems of oppression. Karl Marx studied how
early capitalism transformed animals’ bodies to maximise production of
fat and flesh. A century after Marx toiled in the British Library, Cesar
Chavez organised farm workers in California and later became a vegan, a
stance he considered inseparable from his broader politics. Another
Californian, Angela Davis, is not only a leading Marxist theorist and
activist, but also a notable vegan. Yet, despite this lineage, Marxists
have largely shied from carrying out scholarship and activism for
animals. This has left animal-rights as the prerogative of other
traditions, such as utilitarianism, rights theory, virtue theory, and
care theory. Indeed, many Leftists breezily dismiss animal-rights as an
example of bourgeois sentimentality.
There is hope! Some excellent works have been written, such as Ashley
Dawson’s Extinction, Sunaura Taylor’s Beasts of Burden, Kenneth Fish’s
Living Factories, Donna Haraway’s When Species Meet, and Frank Wilderson
III’s ‘Gramsci’s Black Marx.’ What we want is to deepen these
connections between Left theory and practice to animal-rights. We are
most interested in analyses using approaches from Marxism, post-Marxism,
Frankfurt School, post-structuralism, queer theory, Afro-pessimism,
Afro-futurism, Afro-veganism, disability studies, Karl Polanyi,
feminism, anarchism, and other radicalisms. We invite scholars, writers,
and activists working on these themes, especially those who live in New
York City and its environs as we have limited funds for travel subsidies
(but come from afar if you can finance your voyage).
Astra Taylor, a film-maker and writer, will give the keynote lecture.
Please come to share your work on activist campaigns, poetry,
ethnography, journalistic investigations, scientific experiments,
essays, and academic articles. Projects in all stages of completion will
be considered. Please send a three-hundred word abstract and a short CV
to Troy (tgv...@nyu.edu <mailto:tgv...@nyu.edu>) by February 28.
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