Words for Animals: How Language Shapes Care
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This episode of The Resilient Animal, explores how everyday language about animals—pronouns, labels, euphemisms, and idioms—shapes perception. It argues that calling animals “it” can frame them as objects, while choosing “he,” “she,” or singular “they” can acknowledge them as subjects, especially when uncertainty about consciousness exists. It critiques “owner” as a property-based term and suggests “guardian,” “caretaker,” or “I live with” to emphasize responsibility and care, while noting legal concerns. The script urges replacing euphemisms like “put to sleep” with “humane euthanasia,” and “fixed” with “spay” or “neuter,” and highlights agricultural euphemisms such as “processing” and “harvesting.” It introduces speciesism and examines dismissive terms like “pest” and “just an animal,” then encourages swapping violent animal idioms for nonviolent alternatives through steady, non-performative practice.
00:00 Why Words Matter
02:19 Pronouns and Personhood
06:45 From Owner to Guardian
12:19 Euphemisms and Honesty
18:19 Everyday Speciesism
23:37 Idioms and Casual Violence
28:21 Practice and Closing Thoughts
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