No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Do the swans deceive us all?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 November 2013
Extract
A theoretically nuanced human–animal studies now stands at the forefront of many academic disciplines. The ‘theoretical lag’ characteristic of archaeology means that a subject largely reliant on the remains of humans and animals, and their associated material residues, lies lacking in theoretical sophistication.
- Type
- Discussion
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013
References
Anderson, K., 1998: Animals, science, and spectacle in the city, in Wolch, J. and Emel, J. (eds), Animal geographies, London and New York, 27–50Google Scholar
Anderson, K., 1997: A walk on the wild side. A critical geography of domestication, Progress in human geography 21, 463–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arluke, A., and Sanders, C.R., 1996: Regarding animals (animals, culture and society), Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Armstrong Oma, K., and Hedeager, L., 2010: Introduction, World archaeology, 42 (2), 155–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birke, L., 1991a: Science, feminism and animal natures: I. Extending the boundaries, Women's studies international forum 14, 443–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birke, L., 1991b: Science, feminism and animal natures: II. Feminist critiques and the place of animals in science, Women's studies international forum 14, 451–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birke, L., 1995: Exploring the boundaries. Feminisms, animals and science, in Adams, C. and Donovan, J. (eds), Animals and women, Durham, 32–54.Google Scholar
Bruns, G.L., 2007: Becoming-animal (simple ways), New literary history 38 (4), 703–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calarco, M., 2008: Zoographies. The question of the animal from Heidegger to Derrida, New York.Google Scholar
Conneller, C., 2004: Becoming deer. Corporeal transformations at Star Carr, Archaeological dialogues 11 (1), 37–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deleuze, G., and Guattari, F., 1987 (1980): A thousand plateaus. Capitalism and schizophrenia (tr. Massumi, Brian), Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Derrida, J., 2004: The animal that therefore I am (more to follow), in Atterton, P. and Calarco, M. (eds), Animal philosophy, London, 113–28.Google Scholar
Descola, P., and Palsson, G., 1996: Introduction, in Descola, P. and Palsson, G. (eds), Nature and society. Anthropological perspectives, London, 1–21.Google Scholar
Haraway, D., 1991: A cyborg manifesto. Science, technology, and socialist-feminism in the late twentieth century, in Haraway, D., Simians, cyborgs, and women. The reinvention of nature, New York, 151–52.Google Scholar
Heidegger, M., 1995: The fundamental concepts of metaphysics. World, finitude, solitude (tr. McNeill, William and Walker, Nicholas), Bloomington, IN.Google Scholar
Kalof, L., and Fitzgerald, A. (eds), 2007: The animals reader. The essential classic and contemporary writings, Oxford.Google Scholar
Lucht, M., and Yarri, D. (eds), 2010: Kafka's animals. Animals, hybrids, and other fantastic beings, Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Philo, C. 1995: Animals, geography and the city. Notes on inclusions and exclusions, Environment and planning D. Society and space 13, 655–981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolch, J., and Emel, J. (eds), 1998: Animal geographies. Place, politics, and identity in the nature–culture borderlands, London.Google Scholar
Wolch, J., West, K. and Gaines, T.E., 1995: Transspecies urban theory, Environment and planning D. Society and space 13, 735–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar