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Corey Lee Wrenn, Ph.D.

Vegan Feminist Sociologist, Writer, and Activist

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Author: Dr. Corey Wrenn

Animal Abolitionism, a 19th Century Holdover

Dr. Corey WrennJuly 25, 2017December 1, 2018
The desire to totally liberate other animals from human oppression is generally thought a product of late 20th century imagining. In today's capitalistic  movement, activists and organizations scramble to specialize and copyright their particular brandContinue reading
Essays

Colonizing England and the Naming of Animals

Dr. Corey WrennJuly 2, 2017December 16, 2018
  While many recognize Great Britain as a great imperialist power responsible for untold suffering over the centuries, some might be surprised to learn that the island itself was the site of extensive colonization priorContinue reading
Essays

Are Teddy Bears Vegan? President Roosevelt and the SPCA

Dr. Corey WrennMay 15, 2017December 7, 2018
Speciesism, like any ideology of oppression, is effective in its banality. Consider the "teddy bear." Have you ever stopped to consider its origin? It is not so cuddly as you might imagine. Teddy bears traceContinue reading
Essays

The Politics of the Pure Vegan Myth

Dr. Corey WrennApril 16, 2017January 18, 2019
Veganism as a Symbol Social movements are not only concerned with identifying a social problem and prescribing solutions, but also with maintaining boundaries. Movements must delineate themselves from the mainstream that has been identified asContinue reading
Essays

The Thug Kitchen Cookbook and the Problem of Vegan Blackface

Dr. Corey WrennFebruary 27, 2017January 26, 2019
  In 2014, it was revealed that the authors of the Thug Kitchen, a best selling cookbook utilizing basic ingredients, colloquial Black English, and gangster tropes, were white identified. To begin, I believe their intentions were good. Similar toContinue reading
Essays

On Moral Relativism and Animal Liberation

Dr. Corey WrennJanuary 14, 2017December 30, 2018
White Veganism Intersectionality is a concept that is often rejected in the Nonhuman Animal movement, a problem that is strategically calamitous.  The movement is mostly white-identified, meaning that most leaders and rank-and-file activists fail toContinue reading
Essays

Are Animal Crackers Vegan?

Dr. Corey WrennDecember 3, 2016December 1, 2018
Note: Nabisco removed the cage imagery in 2018. See an updated essay on the continued problems with this design here. Dating back to 1902, Barnum's animal crackers have been an American classic for generations. TheContinue reading
Essays

A Month of Vegan Research: Entanglements of Oppression and Liberation

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 30, 2016June 6, 2019
The following literature review is part of a series for World Vegan Month. Other essays can be accessed by visiting the essays catalog. David Nibert. 2002. Animal Rights/Human Rights: Entanglements of Oppression and Liberation.   AnimalContinue reading
Essays

A Month of Vegan Research: Identity and Effectiveness

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 29, 2016November 25, 2016
The following literature review is part of a series for World Vegan Month. Other essays can be accessed by visiting the essays catalog.   Rachel Einwohner.  1999.  "Gender, Class, and Social Movement Outcomes:  Identity andContinue reading
Essays

A Month of Vegan Research: Manhood and the Exploitation of Animals

Dr. Corey WrennNovember 28, 2016June 1, 2018
The following literature review is part of a series for World Vegan Month. Other essays can be accessed by visiting the essays catalog.   Brian Luke’s 2007 book, Brutal: Manhood and the Exploitation of Animals,Continue reading
Essays

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Dr. Wrenn is Senior Lecturer of Sociology with the School of Social Sciences and Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Social and Political Movements at the University of Kent. She received her Ph.D. in Sociology with Colorado State University in 2016. She was awarded Exemplary Diversity Scholar, 2016 by the University of Michigan’s National Center for Institutional Diversity. She served as council member with the American Sociological Association’s Animals & Society section (2013-2016), was elected Chair in 2018, and co-founded the International Association of Vegan Sociologists in 2020. She serves as Book Review Editor for Society & Animals, Consulting Editor for Psychology of Human-Animal Intergroup Relations, and past Editor for The Sociological Quarterly, is a member of The Vegan Society’s Research Advisory Committee, and hosts Sociology & Animals Podcast. She is the author of A Rational Approach to Animal Rights: Extensions in Abolitionist Theory (Palgrave MacMillan 2016), Piecemeal Protest: Animal Rights in the Age of Nonprofits (University of Michigan Press 2019), Animals in Irish Society (SUNY Press 2021), Vegan Witchcraft: Contemporary Magical Practice and Multispecies Social Change (forthcoming, Routledge, and Vegan Feminism: History, Theory, Activism (forthcoming, Bloomsbury).

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