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Freudian metapsychology can be used to understand cultural phenomenon, especially when there is conflict between differing groups. Reality television, in depicting such conflicts, provides an opportunity to glimpse the underlying unconscious currents motivating group behavior that are at times, seemingly irrational. The television show Whale Wars is a prime example of this aspect of reality-based television. Through its portrayal of the real conflict between Japanese whalers and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, the show reveals unconscious motivations and group dynamics that conform to Freud's theories. This paper will review the psychology of the Sea Shepherds and their relation to the Japanese whalers in an attempt to bring greater perspective and understanding to the conflict.
Asian Journal of Media and Communication, 2023
This paper delves into the intricate dynamics of the Southern Ocean conflict (2005-2017), an at times highly publicized confrontation between Japanese whaling vessels and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. It examines the pivotal role of cultural factors in shaping and driving this conflict. Drawing upon a range of media representations, including television, print, and digital platforms, the analysis underscores how Sea Shepherd's activities, bolstered by substantial support from a dedicated environmental activist subculture, have influenced public perception and action. Central to this study are three distinct cultural perspectives that illuminate the multifaceted nature of conflict and communication. By exploring how cultural underpinnings can both spawn and manifest within conflicts, this paper offers a nuanced understanding of the communicative expressions and cultural dimensions at play in the Japan-Sea Shepherd standoff. The findings not only shed light on this specific case but also contribute to broader discussions on the intersection of culture, communication, and environmental engagement.
Why Whales: The Hierarchies of Love and Animal Protection, 2023
Which animals deserve our protection and why? How do we justify which animals we care about and place at the forefront of our campaigns? Which animal qualities move us and why? How are intelligence and proximity to other perceived-as-human qualities shaping our advocacy, care and love? Why do we care for whales? In 2021 I conducted research in Iceland for my BA thesis, examining the cultural significance of whales and interspecies relationships. Hunting, fishing, mythology, research and activism are different aspects of this human–whale relationship spectrum. Drawing on my ethnographic data, in this presentation I will re-examine how whales moved from being a monster of the sea, to a merely bigger fish, to a protagonist of campaigns about the protection of the Ocean. Why do so many people feel the need to advocate for them and why are their mammalian, family-oriented nature and intelligence the cornerstones of the argument for their protection? I believe speciesism and anthropocentrism shape the ways we chose to advocate for certain animals at the expense of others. Also, we project human qualities onto these animals, to justify our unjustifiable preferences. By using the example of whales and the discourse around them in Iceland, I will be countering the hierarchies of our love and inequalities of animal protection.
The training of marine mammals is based on findings from comparative psychology, particularly those associated with the psychology of learning. In this paper, we examine the manner in which principles that were originally discovered in laboratory settings are now used in the training of marine mammals. These principles are used in a variety of training contexts, including teaching show behav-iors at entertainment parks, husbandry, military applications, and research on cetacean cognition and communication. We also suggest future areas of research that would advance our understanding of marine mammal cognition and enhance the efficacy of existing training procedures. Marine mammal presentations are a ubiquitous characteristic of facilities that house marine mammals for public display. Educational and entertaining pres-entations showcase a wide variety of behavior, from the high flying acrobatics of dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and killer whales (Orcinus orca) to the more lei-surely ...
Environmental groups today are operating in a political climate that for many is characterised by an increasing threat to democratic values in democratic countries. At the same time, a functioning democracy is seen as the pre-requisite for environmental protection. The problems arising out of this tension for environmental action and debate are evident for example in the debate over climate change denial and the question of political funding by corporations. Within this context, this paper will discuss current conceptualisations of the cultural and political role of environmental action. The campaigning and media communications strategies practiced by Paul Watson’s Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and of this particular form of radical environmentalism, are used as a case study to analyse the role of various forms of communicating environmental risk and conflict by various groups in putting environmental problems on the social agenda. But rather than focusing exclusively on the Sea Shepherd’s media practices, the focus in this paper will be on Paul Watson’s whole philosophy of conflict. What kind of environmental risk communication and framing of environmental issues is actually brought into being by Sea Shepherd? What kind of debates and actions actually develop out of and around the symbols produced by Sea Shepherd’s activities? What has been developing as the recognised risk or crisis within the media sphere and public debate around the Sea Shepherds is not whaling as an issue, or even the wider environmental crisis of species extinction, but a number of other political issues, such as the risk to international relations and the handling of social conflicts over environmental issues. Hence, is Sea Shepherd’s symbolic politics further polarising existing antagonisms in the conflict over whaling rather than growing environmental awareness and fostering possible action, and what would be the implications of this for the question of the current and future role of environmental action?
2018
Representation of nonhuman animals is a complex and multifaceted subject. Through the act of representation, it is important for us to consider the impact humans have on constructing the identity of nonhuman animals. Due to the variety of ways humans engage in the act of representation, this project looks at how three representative modes (literature, film, and science) shape our understanding of whales and construct a whale’s identity in the process. The study is based on a human-animal studies framework and uses Vinciane Despret’s notion of agencement to deal with the subject of nonhuman identity.Master of Arts in Humanitie
A perennial challenge in efforts to deal with environmental issues is the question of how to simplify. As such, where and when one simplifies is often a source of conflict, but perversely also paramount to finding a solution. This thesis focuses on one long-standing environmental issue, the whaling debate. Specifically, it performs a strategically sited microethnography of Faroese whaling, grindadráp, exploring linkages between actions on local and international scales. This thesis aims to contribute to environmental sociological efforts to analyse and resolve complex socio-environmental problems. The five papers that together constitute this thesis collectively provide a description of grindadráp from the local scale of the bays where pilot whales are killed to the international forums where whaling as a whole remains an issue at the heart of an on-going, deadlocked conflict. Primarily based on three months’ fieldwork in the Faroe Islands, this thesis combines observation, interviews, media and other literature. The theoretical lenses employed are that of the ‘ontological turn’ and the ‘theory of sociocultural viability’ (cultural theory). The former utilised as a tool for ethnographic practice with the latter used to analyse how different perspectives on reality manifest throughout the whaling conflict. This thesis demonstrates that grindadráp has changed through time as a result of the interactions between actors with different views on the matter at hand. However, in contrast to the global whaling debate, this interaction has been mostly constructive, with appropriate changes in practice ensuring grindadráp’s continued popularity within the Faroe Islands. Furthermore, its continuation will likely depend on grindadráp’s continued ability to balance different perspectives. This thesis thus echoes environmental sociological calls for improved dialogue in the framing and resolution of environmental disputes, suggesting that cultural theory provides a tool that balances relativism and pragmatism in dealing with complex environmental problems.
SLU, Dept. of Urban and Rural Development, 2020
Approved students' theses at SLU are published electronically. As a student, you have the copyright to your own work and need to approve the electronic publishing. If you check the box for YES, the full text (pdf file) and metadata will be visible and searchable online. If you check the box for NO, only the metadata and the abstract will be visiable and searchable online. Nevertheless, when the document is uploaded it will still be archived as a digital file. If you are more than one author you all need to agree on a decision. You can find more information about publishing and archiving here: https://www.slu.se/en/ subweb/library/publish-and-analyse/register-and-publish/agreement-forpublishing/ ☒ YES, I/we hereby give permission to publish the present thesis in accordance with the SLU agreement regarding the transfer of the right to publish a work. ☐ NO, I/we do not give permission to publish the present work. The work will still be archived and its metadata and abstract will be visible and searchable. Publishing and archiving The fish-eating Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW) live in the Salish Sea and have been listed as endangered by the U.S and Canada in early 2000s. Their population is still declining with only 72 individuals left in May 2020. Reasons for their endangerment go from toxins in the water to underwater disturbance and lack of prey, although the latter is favourited by scientists. The whale watch industry is being blamed by many because of the number of whale watching boats on the water and their physical proximity of the SRKW. This thesis is focusing on the inhabitants of the Salish Sea and their perception of the SRKW and the whale watch industry and how they are making sense of the situation. Through the use of the Social Representations' theoretical framework, it is shown that mechanisms such as stories, anthropomorphization, scapegoating and psychological ownership are used by the interviewees to strengthen their social representation of the SRKW but also to take decisions or actions for the pods' survival. The conclusion of this paper summarizes that the whale watch industry is unfairly scapegoated for its activity as it is not the only actor responsible for the SRKW's endangerment and disappearance from the Salish Sea. Even more, the whale watch industry is one of the only actors involved in the pods' survival to have made changes in its practice by creating voluntary guidelines which limit the speed and distance a boat can get around the SRKW. In order to save the endangered SRKW from extinction, most interviewees agree that the priority should be put on solutions to bring the pods' favourite prey, the Chinook salmon, back in the Salish Sea.
Biblioteca Colloquium, 2021
“Political Economies of the Aegean Bronze Age: A Response,” The 2007 Langford Conference: Political Economies of the Aegean Bronze Age (Florida State University, Tallahassee, 22-24 February 2007), edited by D. J. Pullen, pp. 248-266, Oxford: Archaeopress., 2010
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IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing, 2015
2021
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Universidade da Região de Joinville - Licenciatura em História - Teoria da História I - Trabalho 3.3, 2021
MIPRO 2018 : 41st International Convention Proceedings, 2018
Bulletin of the American Physical Society, 2016
Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, 2017