ABSTRACT

This book explores human–animal relations and species- based domination at the intersection of feminism with critique of our domination and exploitation of nonhuman animals, in conversation with power dynamics around coloniality and race, class, sexuality and embodiment.

The collection demonstrates the continued vital importance of feminism – conceptually and theoretically, methodologically and politically – to the development of animal studies. Feminism has made an incisive critique of the ways in which gender and other intersecting differences and inequalities are constitutive of our destructive, exploitative and often violent relationships with nonhuman worlds. An international group of scholars and activists showcase new work, revisiting and extending established debates while negotiating new paths. Amongst the issues addressed in this collection will be questions of animal being and animal rights, caring relations, the relationships between activism and theory, interspecies sexual violence, tension in the animal defence movement around body politics, gender politics and professionalisation, different spaces of gender and animal relations from social media to sexology, safe spaces and sanctuaries, spaces of home – both in times of ‘business-as-usual’ and in times of lockdown.

This multidisciplinary volume will be essential reading to students and academics working in the fields of cultural studies, criminology, geography, history, law, philosophy, politics and sociology, with interest in gender, environmentalism and animal studies.

The editors work in the School of Applied Social Sciences at De Montfort University, Leicester, UK, and share interests in gender and species violence, environmental harms, social justice matters and intersected inequalities.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Locating feminist animal studies

part I|65 pages

Engaging theory

chapter 2|15 pages

What are good multispecies relations?

An analysis through the concept of caring relations

chapter 4|18 pages

Activist-led theory?

Navigating productive frictions across vegan theory and practice

part II|100 pages

Practice

chapter 5|16 pages

Loving and eating animals

A feminist dilemma

chapter 6|17 pages

Deadly contagions, vital contagions

Interspecies relationships in the new pandemic age *

chapter 7|16 pages

‘She always looked after me'

Revisiting reproductive labour and matters of care with/in companion species

chapter 8|15 pages

For women's pleasure?

Interspecies sexual violence and gynocentric sex research

chapter 9|16 pages

‘Well, that's it! I might as well just die now'

Animals and the reinforcement of stereotyped gender representation on social media

part III|66 pages

Politics and activism

chapter 11|18 pages

Fattening solidarity beyond species

The rebellious (body) politics of fat veganism

chapter 12|15 pages

Votes, fur, women

Irish feminist animal rights activists of the 19th century

chapter 13|17 pages

‘Rescued and loved'

Women, animal sanctuaries, and feminism