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Typ záznamu:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Domácí pracoviště:
Katedra anglistiky a amerikanistiky (25400)
Název:
Animal Colonialism in Ruth Ozeki’s My Year of Meats
Citace
Krásná, D. Animal Colonialism in Ruth Ozeki’s My Year of Meats.
In:
Petr Kopecký, Jan Beneš.
Environmental Justice in Ethnic American Literature.
Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Grou, 2024. s. 57-80. ISBN 978-1-66691-900-4.
Podnázev
Rok vydání:
2024
Obor:
Forma vydání:
Tištená verze
Kód ISBN:
978-1-66691-900-4
Název knihy v originálním jazyce:
Environmental Justice in Ethnic American Literature
Název edice a číslo svazku:
neuvedeno
Místo vydání:
Lanham
Název nakladatele:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Grou
Označení vydání
(číslo vydání):
:
Vydáno:
v zahraničí
Autor zdrojového dokumentu:
Petr Kopecký, Jan Beneš
Počet stran:
24
Počet stran knihy:
210
Strana od:
57
Strana do:
80
Počet výtisků knihy:
EID:
Klíčová slova anglicky:
critical animal studies, milk colonialism, meat colonialism, Ruth Ozeki, environmental justice
Popis v původním jazyce:
The chapter critically engages with the complex interplay between environmental injustice, gendered oppression, and the exploitation of nonhuman animals. In applying an ecofeminist lens, the chapter navigates the entwined subjugation of marginalized women and nonhuman animals, framing their bodies as colonized territories manipulated for profit. By arguing that Ozeki’s novel portrays nonhuman animals as enduring instruments of colonization, the chapter illuminates how the meat industry serves and operates as a tool of cultural assimilation andpatriarchal dominance, thereby perpetuating environmental degradation andreproductive violence. Ozeki’s novel, as Krásná argues, unpacks the thematic layers of animal colonialism, revealing the slaughterhouse as a microcosm reflecting broader ecological devastation. Ultimately, by echoing ecofeminist scholars like Carol J. Adams, the chapter underscores the interconnectedness of oppression across human and nonhuman realms.
Popis v anglickém jazyce:
The chapter critically engages with the complex interplay between environmental injustice, gendered oppression, and the exploitation of nonhuman animals. In applying an ecofeminist lens, the chapter navigates the entwined subjugation of marginalized women and nonhuman animals, framing their bodies as colonized territories manipulated for profit. By arguing that Ozeki’s novel portrays nonhuman animals as enduring instruments of colonization, the chapter illuminates how the meat industry serves and operates as a tool of cultural assimilation andpatriarchal dominance, thereby perpetuating environmental degradation andreproductive violence. Ozeki’s novel, as Krásná argues, unpacks the thematic layers of animal colonialism, revealing the slaughterhouse as a microcosm reflecting broader ecological devastation. Ultimately, by echoing ecofeminist scholars like Carol J. Adams, the chapter underscores the interconnectedness of oppression across human and nonhuman realms.
Seznam ohlasů
Ohlas
R01:
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