Abstract
The position of animals in theoretical imagination and society stems from
the historical naturalization of basic epistemological and ontological categories, the complex socio-cultural genesis of concepts whose assumptions are not
easy to unravel nowadays. The given understanding of subjectivity and sociability entails nature as its opposite, but also that all other categories in border
classification areas are a priori subordinate to human interests and goals. The
debates that took place during the 1970s and 1980s, when it comes to animal
rights movements and the ecofeminist movement, have made some sort of confusion in the then accepted approach to this issue. However, only recently has
the current biopolitical theory, by posing the question of human determinism
and taking into account the conceptual breakthroughs related to the boundary
between biological species, established in modern discourse, brought significant innovations in the debate on vegetarianism. In order to explain the shifts
that can be made in the debate in the area that opened up with biopolitical theory, two arguments that have dominated the debate for a long time – ethically
and ecofeministically – are subjected to critical analysis. While the ethical and
ecofeminist standpoints are focused on the categories of political subjectivity
and anthropocentric assumptions, biopolitics raises the issue of overcoming the
deep ambivalence of normative and practical solutions that characterize the human attitude towards animals and their planned and systematized killing for the
requirements of the food industry.