Description

Book Synopsis

The staggering rate of environmental pollution and animal abuse despite constant efforts to educate the public and raise awareness challenges the prevailing belief that the absence of serious action is a consequence of a poorly informed public. In recent decades alternative explanations of social and political inaction have emerged, including denialism. Challenging the information-deficit model, denialism proposes that people actively avoid unpleasant information that threatens their established worldviews, lifestyles, and identities. Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting Our Gaze analyzes how people avoid awareness of climate change, environmental pollution, animal abuse, and the animal industrial complex. The contributors examine the theory of denialism in regards to environmental pollution and animal abuse through a range of disciplines, including social psychology, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and law.



Trade Review

This volume is a most valuable resource for facilitating awareness and understanding of the patterns of denial that serve to buttress destructive environmental policies and injustices against other animals. This powerful work should be on the bookshelf of every scholar/activist working for a nonviolent and sustainable future.

-- David Nibert, Professor of Sociology, Wittenberg University

Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting Our Gaze is a timely contribution to the growing discussion of denialism in the context of animal exploitation and the global destruction of nature – the rage of inhumanity. Its interdisciplinary essays encourage readers to deconstruct taken-for-granted assumptions, practices and structures, and move toward a more compassionate and just world.

-- Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado and author of The Animals' Agenda: Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Human Age

Table of Contents

Introduction: Introducing Denialism in Environmental and Animal Abuse

Tomaž Grušovnik, Reingard Spannring and Karen Lykke Syse

Chapter 1: From Denial to Moral Disengagement: How Integrating Fundamental Insights from Psychology Can Help Us Better Understand Ongoing Inaction in the Light of an Exacerbating Climate Crisis

Susanne Stoll-Kleemann

Chapter 2: Denial as a Sense of Entitlement: Assessing the Role of Culture

Arne Johan Vetlesen

Chapter 3: Skepticism and Animal Virtues: Denialism of Animal Morality

Tomaž Grušovnik

Chapter 4: Human Uniqueness, Animal Minds, and Anthropodenial

Adam See

Chapter 5: Suffering Animals: Creaturely Fellowship and its Denial

Craig Taylor

Chapter 6: Brave New Salmon: From Enlightened Denial to Enlivened Practices

Martin Lee Mueller and Katja Maria Hydle

Chapter 7: The Animal that Therefore was Removed from View: The Presentation of Meat in Norway, 1950-2020

Karen Lykke Syse and Kristian Bjørkdahl

Chapter 8: Political Economy of Denialism: Addressing the Case of Animal Agriculture

John Sorenson and Atsuko Matsuoka

Chapter 9: Celebrate the Anthropocene? Why “Techno-Eco-Optimism” is a Strategy of Ultimate Denial

Helen Kopnina, Joe Gray, Haydn Washington and John Piccolo

Chapter 10: The Horse in the Room: The Denial of Animal Subjectivity and Agency in Social Science Research on Human-Horse Relationships

Reingard Spannring and José De Giorgio-Schoorl

Chapter 11: Still in the Shadow of Man? Judicial Denialism and Nonhuman Animals

Opi Outhwaite

Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting

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    A Hardback by Tomaž Grušovnik, Reingard Spannring, Karen Lykke Syse

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      View other formats and editions of Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting by Tomaž Grušovnik

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 24/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9781793610461, 978-1793610461
      ISBN10: 1793610460

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The staggering rate of environmental pollution and animal abuse despite constant efforts to educate the public and raise awareness challenges the prevailing belief that the absence of serious action is a consequence of a poorly informed public. In recent decades alternative explanations of social and political inaction have emerged, including denialism. Challenging the information-deficit model, denialism proposes that people actively avoid unpleasant information that threatens their established worldviews, lifestyles, and identities. Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting Our Gaze analyzes how people avoid awareness of climate change, environmental pollution, animal abuse, and the animal industrial complex. The contributors examine the theory of denialism in regards to environmental pollution and animal abuse through a range of disciplines, including social psychology, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and law.



      Trade Review

      This volume is a most valuable resource for facilitating awareness and understanding of the patterns of denial that serve to buttress destructive environmental policies and injustices against other animals. This powerful work should be on the bookshelf of every scholar/activist working for a nonviolent and sustainable future.

      -- David Nibert, Professor of Sociology, Wittenberg University

      Environmental and Animal Abuse Denial: Averting Our Gaze is a timely contribution to the growing discussion of denialism in the context of animal exploitation and the global destruction of nature – the rage of inhumanity. Its interdisciplinary essays encourage readers to deconstruct taken-for-granted assumptions, practices and structures, and move toward a more compassionate and just world.

      -- Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado and author of The Animals' Agenda: Freedom, Compassion, and Coexistence in the Human Age

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: Introducing Denialism in Environmental and Animal Abuse

      Tomaž Grušovnik, Reingard Spannring and Karen Lykke Syse

      Chapter 1: From Denial to Moral Disengagement: How Integrating Fundamental Insights from Psychology Can Help Us Better Understand Ongoing Inaction in the Light of an Exacerbating Climate Crisis

      Susanne Stoll-Kleemann

      Chapter 2: Denial as a Sense of Entitlement: Assessing the Role of Culture

      Arne Johan Vetlesen

      Chapter 3: Skepticism and Animal Virtues: Denialism of Animal Morality

      Tomaž Grušovnik

      Chapter 4: Human Uniqueness, Animal Minds, and Anthropodenial

      Adam See

      Chapter 5: Suffering Animals: Creaturely Fellowship and its Denial

      Craig Taylor

      Chapter 6: Brave New Salmon: From Enlightened Denial to Enlivened Practices

      Martin Lee Mueller and Katja Maria Hydle

      Chapter 7: The Animal that Therefore was Removed from View: The Presentation of Meat in Norway, 1950-2020

      Karen Lykke Syse and Kristian Bjørkdahl

      Chapter 8: Political Economy of Denialism: Addressing the Case of Animal Agriculture

      John Sorenson and Atsuko Matsuoka

      Chapter 9: Celebrate the Anthropocene? Why “Techno-Eco-Optimism” is a Strategy of Ultimate Denial

      Helen Kopnina, Joe Gray, Haydn Washington and John Piccolo

      Chapter 10: The Horse in the Room: The Denial of Animal Subjectivity and Agency in Social Science Research on Human-Horse Relationships

      Reingard Spannring and José De Giorgio-Schoorl

      Chapter 11: Still in the Shadow of Man? Judicial Denialism and Nonhuman Animals

      Opi Outhwaite

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