MacKay, Carley Michele

A Spatial Bestiary: Humans, Animals, and the Zone of the Animal Laboratory

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Names:
Creator (cre): MacKay, Carley Michele, Thesis advisor (ths): Rutherford, Stephanie, Degree committee member (dgc): Holdsworth, David, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

In my Master's thesis, I consider how the space of the animal laboratory shapes human-animal relationships, and how, in turn, these relations impact the laboratory, and more specifically, the spatially-bound practices that unfold in this space. I use the frameworks of biopolitics and animal geography, both of which help in illuminating the space of the lab as a site of power, within which human-animal agency becomes exercised. Alongside these analytics, I conducted participant interviews with individuals who work with animals in laboratories or settings similar to laboratories, which animate several themes that I locate at the intersection of biopolitics and animal geography. These themes include a discussion of human-animal relations of power, scientific biopower and scientific market economies, the animal-industrial complex, and the relationship between human binaries and their effects on spatiality. This project is as much about animal lives as it is about human lives.

Author Keywords: agency, animal geography, biopower, human-animal relationships, spatiality, the animal laboratory

2015