Bartram, Angela (2017) Collaborating animals: dog and human artists. In: 2017 Australasian Animal Studies Association Conference, 3 - 5 July 2017, University of Adelaide.
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Item Type: | Conference or Workshop contribution (Paper) |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
How might we consider the non-human animal as equal in a political climate whereby they are eaten, enslaved and exploited? What are the rights and agencies that are afforded when striving for such an act, specifically in a creative sense, and how might we negotiate these animal and human subjectivities through collaborative performance?
This paper analyses the relationship that positions animal bodies as hierarchically other, by offering understanding of differing perspectives. Using my art project ‘Be Your Dog’ (KARST, Plymouth, UK, 2016) as a point of analysis, it discusses how the normative rules of socialization are dissolved through a sensing and watchful knowledge of the familiar body, and how this informs an understanding of the propositional and positional dynamics between, and of inter-species cohabitees. The potential of ‘inter-’ of positionality and subjectivity is encouraged and allowed to flourish through collaborative engagement in the project. The aim is not to confuse species or provoke individuals not being true to animal or human status, but to offer a space where the ‘breathing rights’ and corporeal and cognate attributes of the other become acknowledged through direct experience. The dog was not anthropomorphized at a loss to its’ animal-ness, or the human animalized to the point of redundant human-ness, but the project acknowledges equality despite difference through a disrespect of animal ‘pet’ hierarchies, to see a hybrid emerge through the collaborative act, a fused singular entity made of distinct dog and human parts.
The paper will interrogate how this activity sits in relation to anthropomorphism and animality, and what the consequences are for each participant drawing on theories of ‘becoming animal’ though Deleuze and Guittari, Derrida and Berger, It will discuss the rights and subjectivities of human and animal and how equality of species fits into, and potentially contributes to a new perspective in the economy of animal politics. It will address the contributions of each species and how this used and produced equality, and how and if this brings consequences for domestic animal relationships.
Keywords: | dogs, Bartram, animal collaborators, ethics, animal ethics |
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Subjects: | W Creative Arts and Design > W100 Fine Art |
Divisions: | College of Arts > School of Fine & Performing Arts > School of Fine & Performing Arts (Fine Arts) |
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ID Code: | 27793 |
Deposited On: | 04 Jul 2017 10:03 |
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