The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea

Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Seoul from July 2012 until July 2013, this dissertation offers a novel perspective on human-animal interactions and public discourses regarding livestock versus pet moral boundaries in contemporary Korea. I aim to explore how Koreans struggle to make sens...

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Main Author: Dugnoille, J
Other Authors: Daniels, I
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
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author Dugnoille, J
author2 Daniels, I
author_facet Daniels, I
Dugnoille, J
author_sort Dugnoille, J
collection OXFORD
description Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Seoul from July 2012 until July 2013, this dissertation offers a novel perspective on human-animal interactions and public discourses regarding livestock versus pet moral boundaries in contemporary Korea. I aim to explore how Koreans struggle to make sense of the tension between the emergence of animal welfare and the perpetuation of traditional health behaviours that involve animal processing. The focus will be on why participants in my study, whether activists or not, defended both animal ethics and cat and dog meat consumption, while including Korean animals in fluid and instrumental conceptions of Koreanness. I have analysed a variety of discourses produced by both Korean and non-Korean, academic and non-academic stakeholders, in order to reveal the on-going tension between these powerful ubiquitous ideas and the lived experience of Koreans today. Moreover, I examine how the aesthetics of cruelty and empathy is employed in order to singularize livestock into companion animals thereby transgressing cultural taboos regarding Western ethics of species separation. I also demonstrate that converging and conflicting economic, political, social and cultural agendas are responsible for making Korea’s public discourses about animal welfare very unsettled. My research thus contributes to key anthropological debates about the cross-cultural circulation and cross-fertilisation of moral values that impact the ethics of post-industrial human-animal interactions; and about the influence of policy dialogue, at both national and international levels, on applied animal ethics, cultural stigmatization and the reinforcement of national sentiment.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e0015b7b-b994-4c9f-9f17-76ea8179cd582022-07-12T13:04:07ZThe Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary KoreaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:e0015b7b-b994-4c9f-9f17-76ea8179cd58AnthropologyEthics (Moral philosophy)Practical ethicsEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2015Dugnoille, JDaniels, ILewis, JBased on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Seoul from July 2012 until July 2013, this dissertation offers a novel perspective on human-animal interactions and public discourses regarding livestock versus pet moral boundaries in contemporary Korea. I aim to explore how Koreans struggle to make sense of the tension between the emergence of animal welfare and the perpetuation of traditional health behaviours that involve animal processing. The focus will be on why participants in my study, whether activists or not, defended both animal ethics and cat and dog meat consumption, while including Korean animals in fluid and instrumental conceptions of Koreanness. I have analysed a variety of discourses produced by both Korean and non-Korean, academic and non-academic stakeholders, in order to reveal the on-going tension between these powerful ubiquitous ideas and the lived experience of Koreans today. Moreover, I examine how the aesthetics of cruelty and empathy is employed in order to singularize livestock into companion animals thereby transgressing cultural taboos regarding Western ethics of species separation. I also demonstrate that converging and conflicting economic, political, social and cultural agendas are responsible for making Korea’s public discourses about animal welfare very unsettled. My research thus contributes to key anthropological debates about the cross-cultural circulation and cross-fertilisation of moral values that impact the ethics of post-industrial human-animal interactions; and about the influence of policy dialogue, at both national and international levels, on applied animal ethics, cultural stigmatization and the reinforcement of national sentiment.
spellingShingle Anthropology
Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Practical ethics
Dugnoille, J
The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title_full The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title_fullStr The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title_full_unstemmed The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title_short The Seoul of cats and dogs: a trans-species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary Korea
title_sort seoul of cats and dogs a trans species ethnography of animal cruelty and animal welfare in contemporary korea
topic Anthropology
Ethics (Moral philosophy)
Practical ethics
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