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The Minds of Animals: Conceptions from the Humanities, Sciences, and Popular Culture

What Other Conference/Meeting
When 2008-08-12 00:00 to
2008-09-13 00:00
Where University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
Contact Name Robert Mitchel
Contact Email
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International symposium on conceptions of animal minds covering two days, with 12 speakers each day. Speakers will cover diverse topics: scientific attempts to understand the minds of animals; historical, literary and artistic representations of the minds of animals; the ways in which the minds of animals are presented in the popular media and by special interest groups; and the working assumptions about animal minds of those who live in close interaction with animals.

Call for Papers

The minds of animals fascinate us. Scientific reports about animal minds receive extensive press coverage. Literature abounds with stories about and from the point of view of animals. And popular culture elaborates diverse interpretations of the psychological meanings of animal behavior. Theories of animal consciousness inform all academic and public discourse about human ethical responsibility toward animals.

We envision having an international symposium on conceptions of animal minds covering two days, with 12 speakers each day. Speakers will cover diverse topics: scientific attempts to understand the minds of animals; historical, literary and artistic representations of the minds of animals; the ways in which the minds of animals are presented in the popular media and by special interest groups; and the working assumptions about animal minds of those who live in close interaction with animals.

Each day will consist of three periods of 2.5 hours. During each of these periods, four speakers will discuss their topics for 30 minutes, and this will be followed by a one-half hour discussion. Each 2.5 hour period will be followed by a either a coffee or a lunch break. The conference will occur prior to the Annual Meeting of the International Society for Anthrozoology, which will begin on August 13 at 5 p.m. and end on August 15.

The conference is being organized by Robert W. Mitchell, Psychology, Eastern Kentucky University and Julie A. Smith, Languages and Literatures, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater. To apply to be a speaker at the conference, please email a one-page proposal, a short CV or list of relevant publications or activities to:

Robert.Mitchell at eku.edu and smithj at uww.edu.

The deadline for proposals is December 15 2007.

There will likely be a modest registration fee for coffee, lunch, and miscellaneous conference expenses.


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