代公告--Prof. Dongshin Yi 台大外文系演講

Faculty Colloquium

Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures, National Taiwan University

Title: For What the Bell Tolls: An Ethics of Indifference for Human-Animal Relations
Speaker: Prof. Dongshin Yi (Seoul National University)
Moderator: Prof. Chun-yen Chen (National Taiwan University)
Time: 15:00-17:00, Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Venue: DFLL Conference Room, Gallery of University History, NTU (台大校史館一樓外文系會議室)

Abstract

Asking “what is wrong with animal rights?” Kelly Oliver in Animal Lessons answers, “Moral rules

and juridical legalism help us sleep peacefully at night, whereas ethical responsibility, as Levinas might say, produces insomnia. Rights can be granted, laws can be followed, but ethics and justice cannot rest there. In this sense, ethics must go beyond rights.” Oliver’s ultimate suggestion is “a sustainable ethics,” which asks beings in an ecologically interconnected community to be “responsive and nourishing.” But, given the sheer number of beings in that community, how would one put it in practice without certain concepts of rights and laws? That is, how does one decide whom/what to respond to and nourish and when to stop and move on?

While agreeing with Oliver’s sustainable ethics in general, I find her ethics underprepared to answer these practical questions, which in fact have helped to justify the animal rights approach in animal

ethics and put it in, to borrow Peter Singer’s term, “the expanding circle.” In my paper, I hope to supplement Oliver’s ethics by suggesting an ethics of indifference, according to which indifferent relations between human and nonhuman beings are the norm while the “responsive and nourishing” is an act of exigency. Drawing upon Alphonso Lingis’ work in the main along with several literary and non-literary texts, I will try to flesh out the imperative of indifference.

Speaker

Dongshin Yi is Professor of English at Seoul National University, South Korea. He earned his PhD from Texas A&M University in 2007, and his research interests include posthumanism, animal studies, contemporary American novels, and sci-fi fiction. He is currently leading The Research Network for Human-Animal Studies, a project team supported by National Research Foundation of Korea. His publications include “Wordless Lessons: Imagine Animal Poets and See Animal Thinkers” (American Fiction Studies 2021); “Gulliver, Heidegger’s Man: Swift’s Satire of Man in Captivation” (College Literature 2018); “Broken Head: Artificial Intelligence and Ethics” (Journal of Artificial Intelligence Humanities 2018); “Things like Zombies: New Materialisms and Zombies” (In/Outside: English Studies in Korea 2017); and The Genealogy of Cyborgothic: Aesthetics and Ethics in the Age of Posthumanism (Routledge 2010).

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