Benjamin Meiches explores the role of animals laboring alongside humans (mine-clearance dogs, milk-producing cows and goats, disease-identifying rats) in humanitarian operations, generating new ethical possibilities of care in humanitarian practice—and opening up new ethical ways to think about being human in terms of how we interact with nonhuman animals. Meiches, author of
Nonhuman Humanitarians, is joined here in conversation with Stefanie Fishel.
EPISODE REFERENCES:
-Emmanuel Levinas, “The Name of a Dog, or Natural Rights,” in Difficult Freedom: Essays on Judaism (trans. Sean Hand)
-Heifer International (organization)
-J. M. Coetzee / The Lives of Animals
-Brian Massumi / What Animals Teach Us about Politics
-Liisa Malkki / The Need to Help
-Timothy Morton / Dark Ecology
-Timothy Morton / Ecology without Nature
-David Shannon / Duck on a Bike
-Jack Halberstam / Wild Things
-Eugene Thacker / In the Dust of This Planet
What is University of Minnesota Press?
Authors join peers, scholars, and friends in conversation. Topics include environment, humanities, race, social justice, cultural studies, art, literature and literary criticism, media studies, sociology, anthropology, grief and loss, mental health, and more.