The subject of this edition’s dossier is “Animals”: what rights, limits and duties do we owe them? The “animal issue” has emerged as one of the great banners of contemporary society. Sociologist Alessandro Dal Lago follows the history of philosophers’ indifference towards the animal world; philosopher Vinciane Despret analyses the behaviour of birds and the political and imaginary analogies they elicit; psychiatrist and anthropologist António Bracinha Vieira reflects on what links us to and what separates us from other living things; philosopher Boyan Manchev discusses ecopolitics and animal politics; professor of neurology Massimo Filippi explores the divide between Human and Animal; scientist Vasco M. Barreto questions the concept of speciesism.
In this issue Hisham Mayet, filmmaker, musician, researcher and founder of record label Sublime Frequencies, is interviewed by photographers and editors André Príncipe and José Pedro Cortes, who complement the narrative with a visual essay.
In the section “Figure”, José Manuel dos Santos tells the story of the Marquise Casati, muse, patron and worldly character who turned her life into a work of art, defined trends and anticipated the artistic and cultural attitudes adopted in the 20th and 21st centuries.
This issue’s portfolio is by Dutch artist Magali Reus. It was specifically designed and produced for Electra and it marks her first incursion into photography. Her images are accompanied by an essay by writer and curator Andrew Durbin.
In the section “Diagonal”, Salvatore Settis, Carlo Púlisci e Pedro Levi Bismarck discuss the cult of heritage and the way it is used politically, apropos of the partial destruction of the Notre-Dame cathedral. These essays are illustrated by images by photographer André Cepeda.
In this edition, historian Benedikt Eckhardt comments on a quote by Gustave Flaubert used by Marguerite Yourcenar as the starting point for Memoirs of Hadrian; theatre critic and professor Ana Pais tells us about performative art in the public sphere; professor of literature and literary critic Éric Marty recalls his wanderings through the city of Tel Aviv; poet and translator Daniel Jonas writes about the word “contaminate”; and historian and curator Helena Freitas considers the retrospective exhibitions of artists Berthe Morisot and Dora Maar, recently held in Paris. António Guerreiro and Barbara Chitussi mark the death of Swiss literary critic Jean Starobinski by revisiting some of the main topics in his work, such as the mask, melancholy, its history and its representations.