Thursday, February 26, 2026
Welcome to our 10th Annual Salem Reads Program! Presented in partnership with the Salem Public Library Foundation and Salem Reads: One Book One Community. The book selection this year is Remarkably Bright Creatures, by Shelby Van Pelt.
Speaker:
Emily Plec,
Professor of Communication
Western Oregon University
Where do our ideas about other animals come from? How do our personal experiences and media consumption shape our perceptions of the more than human world? And how are our relationships with nonhumans impacted by the stories we hear and tell-about ourselves and about them? In this talk, we'll explore the ways that narratives (including those told by non-human narrators) can offer us what one famous theorist called 'equipment for living' in a society and in an era increasingly marked by fear, alienation, isolation and disconnection. Participants will learn about the current state of animal studies in communication and have opportunities to share their own experiences and perspectives on the topic.
Emily Plec (PhD, University of Utah, MA, University of New Mexico) is professor of Communication at Western Oregon University, where she teaches courses in rhetoric, media, sport, intercultural, environmental and animal communication. Editor of Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication (Routledge, 2013), Plec advocates for a Communication discipline that considers a meaningful interaction to be a more-than-human enterprise. Her scholarship on humans focuses on communication and social justice with emphases on: the rhetoric on racism in sports, the discourse of women leaders, the labor rights of farmworkers, prison communication and death penalty discourse, and environmental communication pedagogy and practice.
Program Sponsors:
Jan & Les Margosian
Event Details:
Doors open at 11:30
Program starts at 12:00