POPULARITY
On poursuit l'entretien avec Camille Brunel qui décortique la représentation des autres animaux dans la culture, et interroge la prégnance du spécisme dans ces représentations. Mon invité analyse plusieurs dizaines d'œuvres cinématographiques, de dessins animés et de documentaires au prisme de l'antispécisme. On soulève les questions de l'anthropomorphisme, de l'utilisation des animaux comme symboles ou métaphores, du renversement de la situation entre humains et animaux pour faire apparaître le spécisme, de l'exploitation des animaux acteurs, de la symbolique végétarienne ou de la portée animaliste de certains films et dessins animés, de l'effet de Disney sur les représentations des animaux, et de bien d'autres choses encore ! ________________________________ Références et sources citées dans l'entretien : Livres de Camille Brunel : - Le cinéma des animaux - Je est un animal - Les métamorphoses Conférences : - « L'animal, le film et le végétarien : Parcours secret du végétarien au cinéma » - Camille Brunel - « L'animal est-il un humain comme les autres ? » - Camille Brunel - « Les animaux ne sont pas des métaphores » - Victor Duran-Le Peuch Films : Babe, La légende de Manolo (Jorge Gutierrez), I Robot, La série Mad Max, Happy Feet (George Miller), Clous Atlas, Matrix (les soeurs Wachowski), Le sang des bêtes (Georges Franju), Nuit et Brouillard (Alain Resnais), L'Odyssée de Pi (Ang Lee), Noé (Darren Aronofsky), White God (Kornél Mundruczó), Cheval de guerre (Steven Spielberg), Mystère (Denis Imbert), Eo (Jerzy Skolimowski), Le Règne animal (Thomas Cailley), La revanche d'une blonde (Robert Luketic), La forme de l'eau (Guillermo del Toro), Massacre à la tronçonneuse (Tobe Hooper), Hellboy (Guillermo del Toro), Qu'est-ce qu'on a fait au bon Dieu ? (Philippe de Chauveron), Avatar 2 (James Cameron), Gorge, coeur, ventre (Maud Alpi) Dessins animés : La Belle et la bête, Frère des ours, Madagascar, Wallace et Gromit (Nick Park), Chicken Run, Dumbo, Bambi, Zootopie Documentaires : Secrets of the Whales et Secrets of the Elephants (James Cameron), Océans (Jacques Perrin et Jacques Cluzaud) Autres références : - Casques de réalité virtuelle pour les vaches - Étude sur les chats qui nous ignorent - Frankenstein ou le Prométhée moderne - Mary Shelley - La politique sexuelle de la viande - Carol J. Adams - Repas véganes sur le tournage d'Avatar - The Disneyfication of animals - Rebecca Rose Stanton - Publispécisme, concept développé par Axelle Playoust-Braure, voir ép 9 et 10 du podcast où elle l'explique - Deux analyses de la question raciale dans Zootopia : - Au nom des requins - François Sarano - L'inconscient des animaux - Florence Burgat Recommandations de Camille Brunel : - Le film Cow d'Andrea Arnold - Le TED Talk ‘Grief and love in the animal kingdom' par Barbara J. King (et son livre How animals grieve) - La folie des chats - Claude Béata ________________________________ SOUTENIR : https://linktr.ee/poissonpodcast Comme un poisson dans l'eau est un podcast indépendant et sans publicité : votre soutien est indispensable pour qu'il puisse continuer à exister. Merci d'avance ! Abonnez-vous sur les réseaux sociaux à @poissonpodcast (Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, etc.) ________________________________ CRÉDITS Comme un poisson dans l'eau est un podcast indépendant créé et animé par Victor Duran-Le Peuch. Charte graphique : Ivan Ocaña Générique : Synthwave Vibe par Meydän Musique : Poker par Galshi Revolution
In this episode we talk about Greta Thunberg, a climate activist who got her start at the age of 15. We discuss how her fears of climate change, while very valid, have been dismissed by the media and global leaders. Then we follow the path that Greta had to take to be taken seriously and the lack of media coverage other young activists have dealt with. Finally, we discuss the impact she has had on people her age and across the planet. Follow the podcast: BlueSky and Twitter: @BigRepPod Instagram and TikTok: @BigReputationsPod Become a Patreon supporter: patreon.com/bigreputationspod Merch: https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/86669619 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hosts: Kimberly Kunkle and Rebecca L. Salois Logo Design: Samantha Marmolejo Music: Shawn P. Russell Sound Consultant and Mixing: Shawn P. Russell Recording and Editing: Rebecca L. Salois ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sources: No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference, by Greta Thunberg (a collection of speeches she delivered between September 2018 and September 2019 around the world) Scenes from the Heart (written with her parents and her sister) Our House Is on Fire: Scenes of a Family and a Planet in Crisis (also with her parents and her sister) “Time Person of the Year 2019 - Greta Thunberg,” by Charlotte Alter, Suyin Haynes and Justin Worland “Greta Thunberg: Who is the climate activist and what has she achieved?” by the BBC “Greta Thunberg's 'The Climate Book' Urges World to Keep Climate Justice Out Front,” by Barbara J. King
Cesar Chavez fought for farmworker rights, but he was also a devout animal lover and did not eat animal flesh. In honor of Cesar Chavez Day (March 31), we reprise our interview with Barbara J. King who talks about empathy toward animals. For some like Chavez it's developed over time through their dogs and animal companions, as King explains, recognizing empathy in animals is a two-way street. Contact us at PETA.org The PETA Podcast PETA, the world's largest animal rights organization, is 9 million strong and growing. This is the place to find out why. Hear from insiders, thought leaders, activists, investigators, politicians, and others why animals need more than kindness·they have the right not to be abused or exploited in any way. Hosted by Emil Guillermo. Music provided by CarbonWorks. Go to Apple podcasts and subscribe. Contact and follow host Emil Guillermo on Twitter @emilamok Or at www.amok.com Get the podcast on YouTube. www.YouTube.com/@emilamok1 See Emil Guillermo's one-man show at the New York City Fringe Festival in April. And the Orlando Fringe in May. Please subscribe, rate, and review wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks for listening to THE PETA PODCAST! Originally released March 27, 2024 ©PETA, Emil Guillermo 2024
The Animal Rights discussion began when philosophers asked whether animals suffer. They do. But physical pain is one thing, do they feel emotions and grief? If a donkey does, does a spider? Author Barbara J. King, a professor emerita in Anthropology at William and Mary talks to Emil Guillermo about her research and how a knowledge of animal feelings could improve our empathy and compassion toward animals. Take action at PETA.org. The PETA Podcast PETA, the world's largest animal rights organization, is 9 million strong and growing. This is the place to find out why. Hear from insiders, thought leaders, activists, investigators, politicians, and others why animals need more than kindness—they have the right not to be abused or exploited in any way. Hosted by Emil Guillermo. Powered by PETA activism. Contact us at PETA.org Music provided by CarbonWorks. Go to Apple podcasts and subscribe. Contact and follow host Emil Guillermo on Twitter @emilamok Or at www.amok.com See Emil in New York 9/6/23, 9/14/23 at Under St. Marks Theater, New York City. Please subscribe, rate and review wherever you get your podcasts. Help us grow the podcast by taking this short survey. Thanks for listening to THE PETA PODCAST! Originally released Aug. 4, 2021 copyright 2021 ©2023
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Barbara is emerita professor of anthropology at William & Mary and a freelance science writer and public speaker. The author of seven books, including the new Animals' Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild, Barbara focuses on animal emotion and cognition, the ethics of our relationships with animals, and the evolutionary history of language, culture, and religion. Her book How Animals Grieve has been translated into 7 languages and her TED talk on animal love and grief has now received over 3 million views. In Sentientist Conversations we talk about the two most important questions: “what's real?” & “what matters?” Sentientism is "evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings." The video of our conversation is here on YouTube. We discuss: 00:00 Welcome 01:39 Barbara's Intro Biological anthropology, animal advocacy & writing 28 years in academia then freelance science writing & speaking Animal cognition & animal-human relationships Watching Jane Goodall & Dian Fossey go from scholarship to advocacy… doing fieldwork with apes… “Soon it became clear I wanted to work for animals as well as on animals” 05:05 What's Real? Growing up in New Jersey Raised Presbyterian, sent to church & sunday school “It wasn't really part of my identity”, more background & community “My parents didn't question that there was a god, that god was… in charge of us.” “I fell into that… & then came college” First person in the family to go to college. “I arrived with my Bible – within 2 or 3 semesters that was kind of exploded” Taking theology & pre-med classes Agnostic then atheist Choosing evolution & science Mum at 88: “I wonder if what I thought all those years is really true… is there a god?” “I was never particularly interested in reconciling religion & science” Refusing money from The Templeton Foundation… “I don't accept the claim that there's no agenda” Religious ethical problems: Homophoba, sexism, fears of hell, human dominion Writing “Evolving God”. Finding the earliest roots of religious expression in non-human animal imagination/rule-following/empathy/perspective-taking Jane Goodall's claim that chimpanzees feel awe & wonder The universal “religious” sense Frans de Waal “I think that I am relentlessly naturalistic” Working with primates “Concentrically my circles began to widen” ...and much more. Full show notes at Sentientism.info and on YouTube. Sentientism is “Evidence, reason & compassion for all sentient beings.” More at Sentientism.info. Join our "I'm a Sentientist" wall via this simple form. Everyone, Sentientist or not, is welcome in our groups. The biggest so far is here on FaceBook. Come join us there! Thanks Graham.
This week, to mark 100 years since the publication of ‘Ulysses', Thea Lenarduzzi and Lucy Dallas are joined by the novelist Audrey Magee to discuss how James Joyce wrestled with the demands, political and personal, of the Irish language; the anthropologist and science writer Barbara J. King reviews Andrea Arnold's film ‘Cow', which attempts to show life from an animal's perspective; plus, Mary Beard shares a few thoughts on Roman kissing.'Cow', directed by Andrea ArnoldProduced by Sophia Franklin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On les recueille parfois très jeunes. Ils grandissent avec nous, dans nos maisons, au quotidien, ils viennent ronronner quand on a un coup de mou et jouer quand on a besoin de se changer les idées. Nos animaux de compagnie sont tour à tour des membres de la famille, des amis, presque des psys. Ce n'est dès lors pas surprenant que, lors de la préparation de cet épisode, des dizaines et des dizaines de personnes aient proposé leur témoignage. Caroline, Mary-Lou, Audrey, Pauline, Léa… Elles avaient un chien ou un chat, un compagnon si proche pendant des années qui les a aidées, accompagnées, réconfortées. Qui était toujours là quand il fallait. Jusqu'au jour où il n'y a pas eu d'autre choix que de dire au revoir. Parce que l'on parle peu des gens qui restent. De celles et ceux qui se suspendent à une absence, à un vide. On dit souvent que le deuil, c'est le prix à payer pour avoir aimé. Les gens qui restent payent ce prix, retiennent leur souffle des semaines, des mois, des années tout en oubliant parfois que leur cœur bat et que vivre, c'est accepter la possibilité de la perte. Deuil du conjoint, de l'enfant, de l'animal de compagnie, deuil d'une amitié et même deuil de soi-même… dans Les gens qui restent, Lucile Bellan raconte la vie d'après, celle où s'entremêlent l'absence et la nécessité d'avancer. Les gens qui restent est un podcast de Lucile Bellan produit et réalisé par Slate.fr sous la direction de Christophe Carron et Benjamin Saeptem Hours. Production éditoriale et réalisation: Benjamin Saeptem Hours Montage: Benjamin Saeptem Hours et Victor Benhamou Musique: Arnaud Denzler Illustration du podcast: Chien fou Animaux cités: Hachikō, le chien fidèle de Shibuya, et Lil Bub, la meilleure chatte d'internet Œuvres citées: How animals grieve de Barbara J. King, L'incroyable voyage de Duwayne Dunham, L'histoire sans fin de Wolfgang Petersen Katia Kermoal est psychologue et thérapeute spécialisée en EMDR. Suivez-nous sur Instagram et Facebook. Pour échanger et découvrir de nouveaux podcasts, rejoignez aussi le Slate Podcast Club sur Facebook.
The Animal Rights discussion began when philosophers asked whether animals suffer. They do. But physical pain is one thing, do they feel emotions and grief? If a donkey does, does a spider? Author Barbara J. King, a professor emerita in Anthropology at William and Mary talks to Emil Guillermo about her research and how a knowledge of animal feelings could improve our empathy and compassion toward animals. Take action at PETA.org. The PETA Podcast PETA, the world's largest animal rights organization, is 6.5 million strong and growing. This is the place to find out why. Hear from insiders, thought leaders, activists, investigators, politicians, and others why animals need more than kindness—they have the right not to be abused or exploited in any way. Hosted by Emil Guillermo. Powered by PETA activism. Contact us at PETA.org Listen to the very first PETA podcast with Ingrid Newkirk Music provided by CarbonWorks. Go to Apple podcasts and subscribe. Contact and follow host Emil Guillermo on Twitter @emilamok Or at www.amok.com Please subscribe, rate and review wherever you get your podcasts. Help us grow the podcast by taking this short survey. Thanks for listening to THE PETA PODCAST! Originally released Aug. 4, 2021 copyright 2021
In this special episode of the Alliance podcast, HRA's president and CEO Lisa LaFontaine sits down with author Barbara J. King to discuss animals experiencing grief, respecting invertebrates, stopping animal testing in medical labs, and so much more. Check out King's new book Animal's Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild.
As people come to understand more about animals' inner lives-the intricacies of their thoughts and the emotions that are expressed every day by whales and cows, octopus and mice, even bees-we feel a growing compassion, a desire to better their lives. But how do we translate this compassion into helping other creatures, both those that are and are not our pets? Bringing together the latest science with heartfelt storytelling, Animals' Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild (University of Chicago Press, 2021) reveals the opportunities we have in everyday life to help animals in our homes, in the wild, in zoos, and in science labs, as well as those considered to be food. Barbara J. King, an expert on animal cognition and emotion, guides us on a journey both animal and deeply human. We meet cows living relaxed lives in an animal sanctuary-and cows with plastic portals in their sides at a university research station. We observe bison free-roaming at Yellowstone National Park and chimpanzees confined to zoos. We learn with King how to negotiate vegetarian preferences in omnivore restaurants. We experience the touch of a giant Pacific octopus tasting King's skin with one of his long, neuron-rich arms. We reflect on animal testing as King shares her own experience as the survivor of a particularly nasty cancer. And in a moment all too familiar to many of us, we recover from a close encounter with two spiders in the home. This is a book not of shaming and limitation, but of uplift and expansion. Throughout this journey, King makes no claims of personal perfection. Though an animal expert, she is just like the rest of us: on a journey still, learning each day how to be better, and do better, for animals. But as Animals' Best Friends makes clear, challenging choices can bring deep rewards. By turning compassion into action on behalf of animals, we not only improve animals' lives-we also immeasurably enrich our own. Barbara King is Emerita Professor of Anthropology at William & Mary. You can follow her on Twitter @bjkingape and find her work at www.barbarajking.com Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/animal-studies
As people come to understand more about animals' inner lives-the intricacies of their thoughts and the emotions that are expressed every day by whales and cows, octopus and mice, even bees-we feel a growing compassion, a desire to better their lives. But how do we translate this compassion into helping other creatures, both those that are and are not our pets? Bringing together the latest science with heartfelt storytelling, Animals' Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild (University of Chicago Press, 2021) reveals the opportunities we have in everyday life to help animals in our homes, in the wild, in zoos, and in science labs, as well as those considered to be food. Barbara J. King, an expert on animal cognition and emotion, guides us on a journey both animal and deeply human. We meet cows living relaxed lives in an animal sanctuary-and cows with plastic portals in their sides at a university research station. We observe bison free-roaming at Yellowstone National Park and chimpanzees confined to zoos. We learn with King how to negotiate vegetarian preferences in omnivore restaurants. We experience the touch of a giant Pacific octopus tasting King's skin with one of his long, neuron-rich arms. We reflect on animal testing as King shares her own experience as the survivor of a particularly nasty cancer. And in a moment all too familiar to many of us, we recover from a close encounter with two spiders in the home. This is a book not of shaming and limitation, but of uplift and expansion. Throughout this journey, King makes no claims of personal perfection. Though an animal expert, she is just like the rest of us: on a journey still, learning each day how to be better, and do better, for animals. But as Animals' Best Friends makes clear, challenging choices can bring deep rewards. By turning compassion into action on behalf of animals, we not only improve animals' lives-we also immeasurably enrich our own. Barbara King is Emerita Professor of Anthropology at William & Mary. You can follow her on Twitter @bjkingape and find her work at www.barbarajking.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
As people come to understand more about animals' inner lives-the intricacies of their thoughts and the emotions that are expressed every day by whales and cows, octopus and mice, even bees-we feel a growing compassion, a desire to better their lives. But how do we translate this compassion into helping other creatures, both those that are and are not our pets? Bringing together the latest science with heartfelt storytelling, Animals' Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild (University of Chicago Press, 2021) reveals the opportunities we have in everyday life to help animals in our homes, in the wild, in zoos, and in science labs, as well as those considered to be food. Barbara J. King, an expert on animal cognition and emotion, guides us on a journey both animal and deeply human. We meet cows living relaxed lives in an animal sanctuary-and cows with plastic portals in their sides at a university research station. We observe bison free-roaming at Yellowstone National Park and chimpanzees confined to zoos. We learn with King how to negotiate vegetarian preferences in omnivore restaurants. We experience the touch of a giant Pacific octopus tasting King's skin with one of his long, neuron-rich arms. We reflect on animal testing as King shares her own experience as the survivor of a particularly nasty cancer. And in a moment all too familiar to many of us, we recover from a close encounter with two spiders in the home. This is a book not of shaming and limitation, but of uplift and expansion. Throughout this journey, King makes no claims of personal perfection. Though an animal expert, she is just like the rest of us: on a journey still, learning each day how to be better, and do better, for animals. But as Animals' Best Friends makes clear, challenging choices can bring deep rewards. By turning compassion into action on behalf of animals, we not only improve animals' lives-we also immeasurably enrich our own. Barbara King is Emerita Professor of Anthropology at William & Mary. You can follow her on Twitter @bjkingape and find her work at www.barbarajking.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science
This weeks episode we speak to Anthropologist Barbara J King, who has spoken on a TED Talk called 'Grief and love in the animal kingdom'. Barbara has studied animal behaviours and written multiple books on animal love and grief. In light of her upcoming book release 'Animals' Best Friends: Putting Compassion to Work for Animals in Captivity and in the Wild', we speak to her about her journey into anthropology, her studies on monkey's, baboons and chimpanzees in Africa, her views on zoos, sanctuaries, hunting and how we can all do better for animals in our daily lives by changing our diets, and making better choices.Please head over to her website www.barbarajking.com for more information and to order her upcoming book that speaks of her personal journey.This episode has a transcript for the hearing impaired.
Dr. Barbara J. King joins us in this week's episode to discuss animal cognition and emotion. Along the way, we hear about her start in biological anthropology studying baboons and how her career shifted several times to focus on animal cognition more broadly, followed by a turn towards advocacy and science communication. Find links to articles, books, and pics at AnthroBiology.com. Find the show on Instagram and Twitter @AnthroBiology.
From mourning orcas to distressed elephants, biological anthropologist Barbara J. King has witnessed grief and love across the animal kingdom. In this eye-opening talk, she explains the evidence behind her belief that many animals experience complex emotions, and suggests ways all of us can treat them more ethically -- including every time we eat. "Animals don't grieve exactly like we do, but this doesn't mean that their grief isn't real," she says. "It is real, and it's searing, and we can see it if we choose." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Stuff to Blow Your Mind's Robert Lamb and Joe McCormick as they discuss string theory, super AI and animal emotions with physicist Brian Greene, physicist Max Tegmark and anthropologist Barbara J. King at the World Science Festival. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Let's talk about string theory, super AI and animal emotions. Here are our 2018 World Science Festival interviews with physicist Brian Greene, physicist Max Tegmark and anthropologist Barbara J. King. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Du deuil des orques à la détresse des éléphants, l'anthropologue biologique Barbara J. King, a été le témoin du chagrin et de l'amour à travers tout le règne animal. Elle nous explique sa conviction que de nombreux animaux éprouvent des émotions complexes. En ouvrant les yeux sur les émotions des animaux, nous pouvons commencer à les traiter de manière plus éthique, y compris chaque fois que nous mangeons. « Les animaux n'expriment pas exactement leur chagrin comme nous, mais cela ne veut pas dire qu'il n'est pas réel », nous dit-elle, « Il est bien réel et il est vif, et nous pouvons le voir, si nous le choisissons. »
From mourning orcas to distressed elephants, biological anthropologist Barbara J. King has witnessed grief and love across the animal kingdom. In this eye-opening talk, she explains the evidence behind her belief that many animals experience complex emotions, and suggests ways all of us can treat them more ethically -- including every time we eat. "Animals don't grieve exactly like we do, but this doesn't mean that their grief isn't real," she says. "It is real, and it's searing, and we can see it if we choose."
애도하는 범고래에서 비탄에 빠진 코끼리까지, 생물인류학자 바바라 킹은 동물계의 사랑과 애도를 쭉 지켜보았다. 이 놀라운 강연에서 킹은 많은 동물들이 복잡한 감정을 느낄 수 있다는 것을 증명하고, 우리 모두가 동물을 더 윤리적으로 대할 수 있는 (식습관 개선을 포함한) 대안들을 제시한다. 그리고는 이렇게 말한다. "동물이 우리 인간과 꼭 같은 모습으로 슬퍼하지 않는다고 해서 이들의 슬픔이 거짓이라고 할 수는 없어요. 동물의 슬픔은 진실하고 절실하며, 우리가 마음만 먹으면 그 슬픔을 느낄 수 있어요."
From mourning orcas to distressed elephants, biological anthropologist Barbara J. King has witnessed grief and love across the animal kingdom. In this eye-opening talk, she explains the evidence behind her belief that many animals experience complex emotions, and suggests ways all of us can treat them more ethically -- including every time we eat. "Animals don't grieve exactly like we do, but this doesn't mean that their grief isn't real," she says. "It is real, and it's searing, and we can see it if we choose."
De orcas de luto a elefantes angustiados, a antropóloga física Barbara J. King testemunhou luto e amor em todo o reino animal. Nesta palestra reveladora, ela explica as evidências por trás de sua crença de que muitos animais passam por emoções complexas e sugere maneiras pelas quais todos nós podemos tratá-los com mais ética, inclusive todas as vezes em que nos alimentamos. "Os animais não sofrem exatamente como nós, mas isso não significa que a dor deles não seja real", diz ela. "É real e aguda, e podemos vê-la, se quisermos."
Desde orcas que atraviesan un duelo hasta elefantes que manifiestan profundo sufrimiento, Barbara J. King, experta en antropología biológica, ha sido testigo del dolor y del amor de muchos animales. En esta reveladora charla, nos habla de evidencias que avalan la teoría de que muchos animales experimentan emociones complejas, y también sugiere de qué manera todos podemos contribuir a tratarlos con más ética, incluso cuando debemos elegir qué comer. "Los animales no hacen el duelo de la misma manera que lo hacemos nosotros, pero eso no significa que no sea un sufrimiento real", afirma. "Es real y devastador. Y es fácil de verlo, si queremos".
From mourning orcas to distressed elephants, biological anthropologist Barbara J. King has witnessed grief and love across the animal kingdom. In this eye-opening talk, she explains the evidence behind her belief that many animals experience complex emotions, and suggests ways all of us can treat them more ethically -- including every time we eat. "Animals don't grieve exactly like we do, but this doesn't mean that their grief isn't real," she says. "It is real, and it's searing, and we can see it if we choose."
Robert Lamb attended the 2018 World Science festival in New York City and had the chance to chat with its founder, physicist Brian Greene -- as well as a couple of noted panelists: physicist Max Tegmark and anthropologist Barbara J. King. This episode features those green room interviews, plus Robert and Joe’s discussion of their answers on theoretical physics, artificial intelligence and the evolution of religion. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Chancellor Professor of Anthropoloy and Author Barbara J. King
Barbara J. King, anthropologist and author of Personalities on the Plate: The Lives and Minds of Animals We Eat, regales us with true tales of animal sentience and wit, after opening the program with Michael Webermann and his new venture, Better Eating International, a way to meet prevegans where they are and accelerate their vegan transition.
With Stig Abell and Thea Lenarduzzi – Rory Waterman on the "uses" of poetry and Stephen Burt's admirable, if rather vexing, new collection The Poem is You: 60 contemporary American poems and how to read them; Barbara J. King on the cannibals in our midst (note: fragile-stomached listeners and lovers of banana slugs be warned); When did modern philosophy begin? And who is its godfather? – TLS Philosophy Editor Tim Crane tackles a new book by A. C. Grayling which seeks answers to these thorny questions. Discover more at www.the-tls.co.uk. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome to the 376th episode of Our Hen House! Mariann interviews Barbara J. King, emerita professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, currently a full-time freelance science writer. Barbara is a frequent guest on national and international radio […]
Barbara J. King is Chancellor Professor of Anthropology at the College of William & Mary. In addition to her new book on animal grief, she has authored Being With Animals (Doubleday 2010), Evolving God (Doubleday 2007), The Dynamic Dance (Harvard University Press 2004), and a number of other books. A reissue of Evolving God is due out in 2017. Dr. King has studied monkeys in Kenya and great apes in various captive settings in Africa and the US. Her research has advanced the thesis that humans and animals have deeper emotional relationships than previously thought. She takes the work of our friend and colleague Dr. Chris Ryan in the other direction, examining the ways our anthropomorphic tendencies have robbed our non-human relatives of their dignity, emotional complexity and moral agency. Barbara is a popular guest on interview programs and recently appeared on the Diane Rehm Show and National Geographic Radio. Previously, she has been interviewed on radio programs in Canada, Austria, Germany, and Australia. She is the recipient of numerous teaching awards from William & Mary and the state of Virginia. She is also associated with the Teaching Company which produces course material taught by America's leading professors. Together with her husband, she cares for and arranges to spay and neuter homeless cats in Virginia. In this episode, we discuss the danger of films like Finding Dory, the notion that the human religious experience is rooted in a primate sense of belonging, and how there are no Bonobo women.
Dr. Barbara J. King sits down with us in the Reptile Living Room to further our insights into the what and or why human primates have a fear of snakes. We cover a wide range of topics in this interview regarding behavior and possibilities of where the fear comes from. You can visit Dr. Kings … Continue reading Fear of Snakes: Dr. Barbara J. King → The post Fear of Snakes: Dr. Barbara J. King appeared first on Reptile Living Room.
Jon Patch talks to author, Barbara J. King about her book, "Being With Animals." Animals are an integral part of our lives and culture. We can find them in children's books as talking characters, in our living rooms snuggled up on the couch or on our dinner plates next to a heap of mashed potatoes. In "Being with Animals," anthropologist Barbara J. King explains how this unique relationship came to be by tracing it back to our earliest human ancestors. More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - Being With Animals ....with Jon Patch