麻豆视频

Celebrated bonobo Kanzi honored in workshop

Kanzi, user of language and maker of stone tools and perhaps the most famous bonobo in the world, died at age 44 in March. A devoted to Kanzi and the relation between great apes and language will be held on April 19, from 1-6 pm in Rm. 142, Goldwin Smith Hall. The event is free and the public is welcome. A livestream will also be available via Zoom;  

鈥淜anzi鈥檚 fame mainly derived from the outstanding symbolic and linguistic abilities he first developed in the experiment Dr. Sue Savage-Rumbaugh led,鈥 said event organizer , Distinguished Professor of Arts & 麻豆视频 (A&S). 鈥淗is life, the research he facilitated, and the remaining members of his family still have a lot to contribute to future scholarship intersecting the sciences, the arts, the humanities, and the social sciences.鈥

During the workshop, a dozen researchers from around the world will meet at Cornell and online to remember Kanzi and to discuss the relation between apes and language, past and future. 

Panel participants include Savage-Rumbaugh, founder of Bonobo Hope; Cathy Caruth, Class of 1916 Professor of English and professor of comparative literature (A&S); Itai Roffman, Yezreel Valley College, Israel; Tristan Garcia, Beaux-Arts, Paris; Tetsuro Matsuzawa, Kyoto University, Japan; and Paul Thibault, University of Agder, Norway. Dubreuil will give the opening talk on Kanzi鈥檚 legacy. 

The event is co-sponsored by the Departments of Psychology and Comparative Literature, the Cognitive Science Program, and the French Studies Program, all in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频.
 

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Bonobos Kanzi and Panbanisha with Sue Savage-Rumbaugh with the outdoor symbols "keyboard."