Tải bản đầy đủ (.pdf) (1 trang)

The palgrave international handbook of a 206

Bạn đang xem bản rút gọn của tài liệu. Xem và tải ngay bản đầy đủ của tài liệu tại đây (48.96 KB, 1 trang )

Slaughterhouses

199

Smith, M. (2002). The ‘Ethical’ space of the Abbatoir: on the (in)human(E)
slaughter of other animals. Human Ecology Forum, 9(2), 49–58.
Soloman, A. (2012). Working undercover in a slaughterhouse: an interview with
Timothy Pachirat. Accessed 13 October 2015.
Torres, B. (2007). Making a killing. The political economy of animal rights. Oakland:
AK Press.
Tuttle, W. (2014). Introduction: the circles of compassion vision. In W. Tuttle (Ed.),
Circles of compassion: essays connecting issues of justice. Danvers, MA: Vegan Publishers.
Twine, R. (2011). Revealing the ‘Animal Industrial Complex’—a concept and method
for critical animal studies? Journal for Critical Animal Studies, 10(1), 12–39.
Vialles, N. (1994). Animal to edible (trans. J.A. Underwood). Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Wicks, D. (2011). Silence and denial in everyday life: the case of animal suffering.
Animals, 1, 196–199.
Weitzenfeld, A., & Joy, M. (2014). An overview of anthropocentrism, humanism,
and speciesism in critical animal theory. In A. Nocella, J. Sorenson, K. Socha, &
A. Matsuoka (Eds.), Defining critical animal studies: an intersectional social justice
approach for liberation (pp. 3–27). New York: Peter Lang.
Young L., P. (Ed.) (2008). Meat, modernity and the rise of the slaughterhouse.
Durham, NH: University of New Hampshire Press.
Nik Taylor is a sociologist who has been researching human-animal relations for
over 15 years, after spending years running an animal shelter. Nik has published four
books and over 40 journal articles and book chapters on the human-pet bond;
treatment of animals and animal welfare; links between human aggression and
animal cruelty including those between domestic violence, animal abuse and child
abuse; slaughterhouses; meat-eating and animal shelter work. She has written for
diverse audiences including, The Guardian, The Drum, The Conversation as well as


numerous blogs and websites. Her most recent books include The Rise of Critical
Animal Studies (ed., with Richard Twine, Routledge, 2014), Humans, Animals and
Society (Lantern Books, 2013) and Animals at Work (with Lindsay Hamilton, Brill
Academic, 2013). More information can be found at https://animalsinsocietygroup.
wordpress.com/
Dr Heather Fraser is a social work academic who started her career three decades ago in
shelters for women, young people and children fleeing from domestic violence and/or
child abuse. Feminist intersectional perspectives that include concerns about species are
her theoretical orientations and care work and emotional labour are related interests. She is
the author of In the Name of Love, Women’s Narratives of Love and Abuse (Women’s Press,
2008). With Nik Taylor, she is working on several human-animal projects and they are
the co-convenor of the Animals in Society Working Group at Flinders University.



×