Philosophical Ecologies: Considerations of the Animal, the Vegetal, and the Environmental

February 11, 2016 - February 13, 2016
Department of Philosophy, DePaul University

Chicago
United States

View the Call For Papers

Speakers:

Cynthia Willett
Emory University

Organisers:

Jennifer Gammage
DePaul University
Amelia Hruby
DePaul University

Topic areas

Talks at this conference

Add a talk

Details

Philosophical Ecologies:
Considerations of the Animal, the Vegetal and the Environmental

23rd Annual DePaul University Graduate Student Conference

February 12-13, 2016

Chicago, Illinois

Keynote Speaker: Cynthia Willett, Emory University

Call for submissions

Deadline: December 1, 2015

Recent research in interspecies ethics, the place of plant life, and conceptions of the environmental testifies to escalating concerns regarding the insufficiency of existing interrogations into the historical privileging of some forms of life over others. These concerns emerge from a long history of global injustices that have resulted in environmental degradation as well as marginalization of both human and nonhuman populations through such practices as speciation, colonization, feminization, criminalization and dehumanization. This conference highlights the particularly urgent need for more rigorously articulated philosophies of the animal, the vegetal, and the environmental and seeks to reconsider conceptual boundaries between natural and artificial spaces and concepts of life.

 Topics of interest may include, but are certainly not limited to:

·      conceptions of animal, plant, and human life

  • environmental, animal, or food ethics
  • eco-feminism
  • theoretical, political, and/or historical distinctions between the human and the nonhuman
  • environmental politics and policy
  • rights discourse and its application to nonhuman others
  • nature and the polis
  • colonization and environmental exploitation
  • eco-affectivity and interspecies attunements
  • intergenerational environmentalism
  • ethology and communication in animal and plant life
  • environmental aesthetics
  • dehumanization and oppression

Submissions from any area of study addressing these topics are welcome. Papers should be limited to 3,000 words and prepared for blind review. Please include name, university affiliation, and submission title in the body of your email, and send all submissions and inquires to: [email protected]

Supporting material

Add supporting material (slides, programs, etc.)

This is a student event (e.g. a graduate conference).

Reminders

Registration

No

Who is attending?

No one has said they will attend yet.

Will you attend this event?


Let us know so we can notify you of any change of plan.