Lynda Birke - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Uploads
Papers by Lynda Birke
Womens Studies International Forum, 1991
PubMed, Apr 4, 1992
1. New Sci. 1992 Apr 4;134(1815):25-8. The researchers' dilemma. Birke L, Michael M.... more 1. New Sci. 1992 Apr 4;134(1815):25-8. The researchers' dilemma. Birke L, Michael M. PMID: 11656102 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]. MeSH Terms. Animal Experimentation*; Animal Welfare*; Animals; Attitude*; Decision Making; ...
Routledge eBooks, Nov 16, 2015
Zoo Biology, Oct 18, 2021
© Lynda Birke, 1999 Edinburgh University Press, 22 George Square, Edinburgh Typeset in Monotype H... more © Lynda Birke, 1999 Edinburgh University Press, 22 George Square, Edinburgh Typeset in Monotype Horley Old Style by Koinonia Ltd, Manchester and printed and bound in Great Britain by MPG Books, Bodmin A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0 7486 ...
In this article, we explore how gender is enacted within human/animal relationshipsspecifically, ... more In this article, we explore how gender is enacted within human/animal relationshipsspecifically, between people and horses. Horse cultures can be gendered in several ways, from little girls and their ponies to modern versions of the cowboy. Here, we examine two specific horse/human cultures -traditional "English" riding, and the rise of what is often termed "natural horsemanship" (despite the preponderance of women within it). Horses themselves, however, play an important role in the way that horsey cultures become experienced as gendered. We examine this in relation to Paechter's © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Introduction Our relationships with nonhuman animals are a crucial, but often overlooked, part of our social life -an omission now increasingly recognized in many disciplines. Scholars in the emerging field of human/animal studies have explored myriad questions relating to our experiences with other animals. Much of this research focuses sp...
A Feminist Companion to the Posthumanities, 2018
L. Birke. In Inventing Women: Science, Technology and Gender (1992). bibtex-import digital-librar... more L. Birke. In Inventing Women: Science, Technology and Gender (1992). bibtex-import digital-library dlbook.
Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies, 2013
Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies, 2014
Humanimalia, 2014
Like us, some kinds of animals require passports to enable movements across national borders. Pa... more Like us, some kinds of animals require passports to enable movements across national borders. Passports tell all kinds of multispecies stories, in which humans and nonhumans are entangled in myriad ways. But what is a passport — human or nonhuman? What kind of symbolic, legal, material, relational identity and not least control and disciplinary work do they “do”? The article departs from autoethnographical notes in a European context, and discusses these questions in dialogue with animal studies literature and actor network theory. So, what kinds of stories do passports tell? In the article, the authors consider first what role passports serve, and then analyze their function, in various forms of surveillance — around disease and global bio-security, around mobility/travel, and around identities. Finally, some issues raised about technologies of identification, and what these say about identity and belonging, particularly with respect to human-animal relationships, are discussed. F...
Womens Studies International Forum, 1991
PubMed, Apr 4, 1992
1. New Sci. 1992 Apr 4;134(1815):25-8. The researchers' dilemma. Birke L, Michael M.... more 1. New Sci. 1992 Apr 4;134(1815):25-8. The researchers' dilemma. Birke L, Michael M. PMID: 11656102 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]. MeSH Terms. Animal Experimentation*; Animal Welfare*; Animals; Attitude*; Decision Making; ...
Routledge eBooks, Nov 16, 2015
Zoo Biology, Oct 18, 2021
© Lynda Birke, 1999 Edinburgh University Press, 22 George Square, Edinburgh Typeset in Monotype H... more © Lynda Birke, 1999 Edinburgh University Press, 22 George Square, Edinburgh Typeset in Monotype Horley Old Style by Koinonia Ltd, Manchester and printed and bound in Great Britain by MPG Books, Bodmin A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0 7486 ...
In this article, we explore how gender is enacted within human/animal relationshipsspecifically, ... more In this article, we explore how gender is enacted within human/animal relationshipsspecifically, between people and horses. Horse cultures can be gendered in several ways, from little girls and their ponies to modern versions of the cowboy. Here, we examine two specific horse/human cultures -traditional "English" riding, and the rise of what is often termed "natural horsemanship" (despite the preponderance of women within it). Horses themselves, however, play an important role in the way that horsey cultures become experienced as gendered. We examine this in relation to Paechter's © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Introduction Our relationships with nonhuman animals are a crucial, but often overlooked, part of our social life -an omission now increasingly recognized in many disciplines. Scholars in the emerging field of human/animal studies have explored myriad questions relating to our experiences with other animals. Much of this research focuses sp...
A Feminist Companion to the Posthumanities, 2018
L. Birke. In Inventing Women: Science, Technology and Gender (1992). bibtex-import digital-librar... more L. Birke. In Inventing Women: Science, Technology and Gender (1992). bibtex-import digital-library dlbook.
Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies, 2013
Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies, 2014
Humanimalia, 2014
Like us, some kinds of animals require passports to enable movements across national borders. Pa... more Like us, some kinds of animals require passports to enable movements across national borders. Passports tell all kinds of multispecies stories, in which humans and nonhumans are entangled in myriad ways. But what is a passport — human or nonhuman? What kind of symbolic, legal, material, relational identity and not least control and disciplinary work do they “do”? The article departs from autoethnographical notes in a European context, and discusses these questions in dialogue with animal studies literature and actor network theory. So, what kinds of stories do passports tell? In the article, the authors consider first what role passports serve, and then analyze their function, in various forms of surveillance — around disease and global bio-security, around mobility/travel, and around identities. Finally, some issues raised about technologies of identification, and what these say about identity and belonging, particularly with respect to human-animal relationships, are discussed. F...