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'The word ‘species’ is etymologically related to looking. Although its primary biological definition is that of beings that can interbreed,species can refer to things of like kind: thisrelates to the term’s Latin derivation, specere, meaning to look. Describing how things look and conveying this appearance to others (whether in writing, or in relaying a memory) typically involves the use of metaphor. This article reads a number of Australian texts in terms of interspecies relations between humans and sheep, and considers the use of metaphor—and metonymy—and the place of ethics in this relation, with a particular emphasis on the face of both human and sheep: how sheep and humans look, in both senses of the word.' (Author's introduction)
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Last amended 5 Aug 2016 13:07:51
https://openjournals.library.sydney.edu.au/index.php/JASAL/article/view/10903/10568
The Sheep’s Face : Figuration, Empathy, Ethics
JASAL
Subjects:
- Twelve Sheep 2004 single work poetry
- Squeaker's Mate 1902 single work short story
- Scrammy 'And 1902 single work short story
- Wariyarranya Nyurranga Ngurra Pungkarriya 2003 single work lyric/song
- The Miracle of Mullion Hill 1954 single work poetry
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