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In series
English
Time
20:00 – 21:30
Location

Academy Building
Broerstraat 5
Groningen
Netherlands

Tickets
€4,- / €2,- with SG-card / free for students

Images of Animals

Maarten Reesink - with livestream

Images of animals are omnipresent in our everyday culture. We grow up with children's books full of animals, and with film classics such as Bambi, The Lion King and Finding Nemo. We endlessly share dog and cat clips via social media and, as adults, still look with admiration at increasingly picturesque images of unspoilt nature with David Attenborough's voiceover. In our daily life, however, we encounter just a fraction of these living beings. Apart from our pets and the species that live in our habitat, like rats, pigeons and insects, or the animals we consume, nature in our direct surroundings has become scarce. But how does this affect the way we see animals? How does popular media conceptualize our view on what an animal is? What are the positive and negative aspects of animation, horror and documentary films with animals? And what recent developments can be discerned in this endless storm of images in today's audiovisual media culture?

Maarten Reesink teaches Human-Animal Studies at the Department of Media Studies and the Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Amsterdam. He is the author of Dier en mens. De band tussen ons en andere dieren (Boom, 2021) and one of the founders of the Centrum voor DierMens Studies Nederland (Centre for Animal-Human Studies Netherlands).

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Also in this series

See also

Waarom hebben wij eigenlijk huisdieren? Hebben dieren ook rechten? Hoe talig zijn ze? Hoe is de Teddybeer geëvolueerd en waarom? En wat kunnen we van dieren leren over onszelf?

Wulf Schiefenhövel
Building Blocks and Remarkable Features of our Species
English

We don’t usually see ourselves as animals. In many quarters of academia it is also not customary to see our own species as one of the other mammals and primates.