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Talking to dogs. Who is listening, what gets said and why does it matter?

conference contribution
posted on 2015-09-01, 00:00 authored by Tony ChalkleyTony Chalkley
This paper is about dogs and stories. As a communication studies academic and owner of a certified therapy dog, I noticed that something interesting happens when people interact with my dog. In some (most) cases, the simple act of patting and talking with the dog triggers the desire to share stories from their own ‘pet history’ – starting with simple catalogue of the animals they have owned, next, moving on to accounts of the life events that have occurred with and because of these pets and finally, sharing how they felt as a result.

History

Pagination

1-1

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Start date

2015-07-12

End date

2015-07-15

Language

eng

Publication classification

EN Other conference paper, X Not reportable

Copyright notice

2015, Melbourne University

Title of proceedings

AASA 2015 : Animal Publics: Emotions, Empathy, Activism : Proceedings of the Australasian Animal Studies Association 2015 Conference

Event

Australasian Animal Studies Association. Conference (2015 : Melbourne, Vic.)

Publisher

Melbourne University

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.

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