Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics

Do animals understand death? How does the cinema represent death? The concept of death has played a crucial role in anthropocentric discussions of the representation of human/animal relationships in cultural practices. This paper will explore the representation of animals and death in the cinema fro...

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Main Author: Barbara Creed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2014-06-01
Series:Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/658
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spelling doaj-5e88aca5bdf94a81bb9ad6e0d4005c652020-11-25T02:19:11ZengLED Edizioni Universitarie Relations 2283-31962280-96432014-06-0121153110.7358/rela-2014-001-cree555Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & EthicsBarbara Creed0Professor of Screen Studies in the School of Culture & Communication at the University of MelbourneDo animals understand death? How does the cinema represent death? The concept of death has played a crucial role in anthropocentric discussions of the representation of human/animal relationships in cultural practices. This paper will explore the representation of animals and death in the cinema from its beginnings to the present in relation to questions of ethics, and the cinematic representation of human/animal intersubjectivity. It will argue that while some individual filmmakers have attempted to represent animal death ethically, this topic remains largely unexamined in theoretical writings on the cinema. This paper will suggest that the spectator frequently seeks ways to displace fears about the death process onto the animal and images of animal death. Finally, I will argue that the space created between spectator and the image of actual animal death on screen is an ethical space that gives rise to a creaturely gaze with the potential to break down boundaries, and to affirm communicability between human and non-human animals in a non-anthropocentric context.http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/658animalsdeathcrueltyfilmdocumentarycreaturelygazevulnerabilityethicsanthropocentrismemotions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barbara Creed
spellingShingle Barbara Creed
Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
Relations
animals
death
cruelty
film
documentary
creaturely
gaze
vulnerability
ethics
anthropocentrism
emotions
author_facet Barbara Creed
author_sort Barbara Creed
title Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
title_short Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
title_full Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
title_fullStr Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
title_full_unstemmed Animal Deaths on Screen: Film & Ethics
title_sort animal deaths on screen: film & ethics
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Relations
issn 2283-3196
2280-9643
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Do animals understand death? How does the cinema represent death? The concept of death has played a crucial role in anthropocentric discussions of the representation of human/animal relationships in cultural practices. This paper will explore the representation of animals and death in the cinema from its beginnings to the present in relation to questions of ethics, and the cinematic representation of human/animal intersubjectivity. It will argue that while some individual filmmakers have attempted to represent animal death ethically, this topic remains largely unexamined in theoretical writings on the cinema. This paper will suggest that the spectator frequently seeks ways to displace fears about the death process onto the animal and images of animal death. Finally, I will argue that the space created between spectator and the image of actual animal death on screen is an ethical space that gives rise to a creaturely gaze with the potential to break down boundaries, and to affirm communicability between human and non-human animals in a non-anthropocentric context.
topic animals
death
cruelty
film
documentary
creaturely
gaze
vulnerability
ethics
anthropocentrism
emotions
url http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/658
work_keys_str_mv AT barbaracreed animaldeathsonscreenfilmethics
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