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Angelaki
Journal of the Theoretical Humanities
Volume 19, 2014 - Issue 3: Philosophical ethology I: Dominique Lestel
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Editorial

EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION: DOMINIQUE LESTEL

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Abstract

Dominique Lestel is a French philosopher whose work is significant for the rethinking of animality and human–animal relations. Throughout such important books as L'Animalite? (1996), Les Origines animales de la culture (2001) and L'Animal singulier (2004), he offers a scathing critique of reductive, mechanistic models of animal behaviour, as well as a positive contribution to etho-ethnographic and phenomenological methods for understanding animal life. Centred around hybrid human–animal communities of shared interests, affects and meaning, his critical and speculative approach to the animal sciences offers a vision of animals as acting subjects and bearers of culture, who form their own worlds and transform them in concert with human and other partners. In tracing the ways in which we share our lives with animals in the texture of animality, Lestel's cutting-edge philosophical ethology also contributes to an overarching philosophical anthropology of the human as the most animal of animals.

Notes

1 Translations are forthcoming from Columbia University Press of Les Amis de mes amis and Apologie du carnivore, with others in progress.

2 See his collection of short stories, Contes perpendiculaires. He has also collaborated with Thierry Bardini in a playful exploration of transhumanism, Journey to the End of the Species. See also Pierre Senges' Adventures of Percival, an “Illustrated Fairy Tale for Adults,” which draws on Lestel's work.

3 For the work of Mark Roth, including this series, visit <http://www.tinsquo.com/>.

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