Anthropomorphic Anthropocentrism and the Rhetoric of Blackfish |
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Authors: | Loretta Rowley Kevin A Johnson |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Communication, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA;2. Department of Communication Studies, California State University, Long Beach, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | The documentary film Blackfish has made a splash at the box office, impacting millions of viewers and prompting calls to legislatively prohibit orcas from being held in captive environments. This essay analyzes Blackfish in terms of its anthropomorphic communication techniques that attribute human qualities to orcas. We introduce the term “anthropomorphic anthropocentrism” to argue that the anthropomorphic construction of orcas in Blackfish may well be a story that is more about what it means to be human than a story about what it means to be orca. Furthermore, we explain the importance of anthropomorphic anthropocentrism as an analytical tool that navigates environmental and ecological frameworks. We conclude that anthropomorphic anthropocentrism’s analysis of anthropomorphic rhetoric and the human epistemological assumptions it reflects, when taken together, offer significant insights into the ways environmental communication creates and/or disrupts human–nature relationships. |
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Keywords: | Anthropocentrism anthropomorphism Blackfish film environment orcas |
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