TY - JOUR
T1 - 'A pig is a person' or 'You can love a fox and hunt it': innovation and tradition in the discursive representation of animals
AU - Cook, Guy
N1 - Guy Cook is Professor of Language in Education at King’s College London. He has published ondiscourse analysis, applied linguistics, literary stylistics, language teaching and public debates aboutfood policy. He is currently principal investigator on a 3-year project, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, entitled ‘People’, ‘Products’, ‘Pets’ and ‘Pests’: the discursive representation of Animals.
PY - 2015/4/23
Y1 - 2015/4/23
N2 - In contemporary urban society animals have been erased in many people's lives (Stibbe 2012, 2014). They are generally encountered only as meat, pets, pests, or vicariously in fiction and documentaries; yet the relation of humans to other animals is a matter of pressing environmental, social, economic, and philosophical concern, and across the social and natural sciences there is increased interest in human-animal interaction. This situation gives rise to many different and often irreconcilable ways of talking about animals, and current debates about human-animal interaction are frequently polarised and based on incompatible standpoints, such as those of animal rights and human exceptionalism. This article analyses two interviews which exemplify such radically opposed views: one with a spokesperson for the Vegan Society, and one with a spokesperson for the Countryside Alliance, a pro-hunting pressure group. Both are placed against the background of other interviews collected as part of an ongoing larger research project on the discursive representation of animals. Each is shown to use and promote a way of speaking about animals which is at odds with mainstream establishment discourse. It is suggested that they represent two mirror-image reactions to the erasure of animals in contemporary urban life which, despite their differences, reflect a more intimate encounter with actual animals. One actively seeks to preserve and promote a traditional discourse, the other to innovate a new non-speciesist discourse. They thus reflect, in their uses of language, contrasting possible reactions to a major social and environmental change.
AB - In contemporary urban society animals have been erased in many people's lives (Stibbe 2012, 2014). They are generally encountered only as meat, pets, pests, or vicariously in fiction and documentaries; yet the relation of humans to other animals is a matter of pressing environmental, social, economic, and philosophical concern, and across the social and natural sciences there is increased interest in human-animal interaction. This situation gives rise to many different and often irreconcilable ways of talking about animals, and current debates about human-animal interaction are frequently polarised and based on incompatible standpoints, such as those of animal rights and human exceptionalism. This article analyses two interviews which exemplify such radically opposed views: one with a spokesperson for the Vegan Society, and one with a spokesperson for the Countryside Alliance, a pro-hunting pressure group. Both are placed against the background of other interviews collected as part of an ongoing larger research project on the discursive representation of animals. Each is shown to use and promote a way of speaking about animals which is at odds with mainstream establishment discourse. It is suggested that they represent two mirror-image reactions to the erasure of animals in contemporary urban life which, despite their differences, reflect a more intimate encounter with actual animals. One actively seeks to preserve and promote a traditional discourse, the other to innovate a new non-speciesist discourse. They thus reflect, in their uses of language, contrasting possible reactions to a major social and environmental change.
KW - Human Animal Studies, animal studies, discourse analysis, ecolinguistics, ecocriticism, animal rights, speciesism, human exceptionalism, animal welfare, veganism, hunting, animal erasure, interviews
U2 - 10.1177/0957926515576639
DO - 10.1177/0957926515576639
M3 - Article
SN - 0957-9265
VL - 26
JO - Discourse & Society
JF - Discourse & Society
IS - 5
ER -