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E-raamat: Animals, Animality, and Literature

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  • Sari: Cambridge Critical Concepts
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108581165
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Cambridge Critical Concepts
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108581165
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Animals, Animality, and Literature offers readers a one-volume survey of the field of literary animal studies in both its theoretical and applied dimensions. Focusing on English literary history, with scrupulous attention to the interplay between English and foreign influences, this collection gathers together the work of nineteen internationally noted specialists in this growing discipline. Offering discussion of English literary works from Beowulf to Virginia Woolf and beyond, this book explores the ways human/animal difference has been historically activated within the literary context: in devotional works, in philosophical and zoological treatises, in plays and poems and novels, and more recently within emerging narrative genres such as cinema and animation. With an introductory overview of the historical development of animal studies and afterword looking to the field's future possibilities, Animals, Animality, and Literature provides a wide-ranging survey of where this discipline currently stands.

Arvustused

'This is a reference book indispensable to any self-respecting academic library, but it is also a publication that sits well in the personal collection of any student or lay person interested in the discipline.' Janette Leaf, The British Society for Literature and Science

Muu info

Introduces the field of animal studies as a means of exploring human-animal relations in literature, philosophy, and culture.
List of Illustrations
ix
Notes on Contributors xi
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction: Beasts in the Republic of Letters 1(28)
Bruce Boehrer
Molly Hand
PART I ORIGINS
1 Aristotle's Zoology in the Medieval World
29(14)
Pieter Beullens
2 Howling Wolves and Other Beasts: Animals and Monstrosity in the Middle Ages
43(14)
Luuk Houwen
3 Medieval Blood Sport
57(16)
William Marvin
4 Animals in Late-Medieval Hagiography and Romance
73(15)
David Salter
5 Lions, Mice, and Learning from Animals in Henryson's Fables
88(17)
Gillian Rudd
PART II DEVELOPMENT
6 Animals, the Devil, and the Sacred in Early Modern English Culture
105(16)
Molly Hand
7 Shakespeare's Animal Theater
121(15)
Bruce Boehrer
8 Swift Among the Locusts: Vermin, Infestation, and Natural Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century
136(20)
Lucinda Cole
9 Classify and Display: Human and Animal Species in Linnaeus and Cuvier
156(24)
Matthew Senior
10 Animal Subjectivities: Gendered Literary Representation of Animal Minds in Anna Sewell's Black Beauty
180(17)
Deborah Denenholz Morse
11 Friedrich Nietzsche on Human Nature: Between Philosophical Anthropology and Animal Studies
197(20)
Vanessa Lemm
PART III CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES
12 Opening Up a Dossier: Animals, Animalities, and Living Together with Roland Barthes
217(14)
Michael Lundblad
13 Animal Unfamiliars: A Bestiary of Time-Travel Cinema
231(17)
Alanna Thain
14 Theorizing Animals: Heidegger, Derrida, Agamben
248(17)
Matthew Calarco
15 Becoming-Animal in the Literary Field
265(19)
Brian Massumi
16 Animation and Animism
284(17)
Thomas Lamarre
17 Becoming Mammoth: The Domestic Animal, Its Synthetic Dreams, and the Pursuit of Multispecies F(r)ictions
301(18)
David Jaclin
18 Bush/Animals
319(16)
Peter Kulchyski
Afterword 335(10)
Colleen Glenney Boggs
Select Bibliography 345(32)
Index 377
Bruce Boehrer is Bertram H. Davis Professor of Renaissance literature in the Department of English at Florida State University. His most recent single-author books include Environmental Degradation in Jacobean Drama (Cambridge, 2013) and Animal Characters: Nonhuman Beings in European Literature (2010). From 2000 to 2008 he served as Founding Editor of the Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, and he is editor of A Cultural History of Animals in the Renaissance (2007). Molly Hand is Entrepreneur in Residence and Lecturer in the Department of English at Florida State University. Her scholarly work appears in Renaissance and Reformation/Renaissance et Réforme; Working Subjects in Early Modern English Drama, edited by Michelle Dowd and Natasha Korda (2011); and The Oxford Handbook of Thomas Middleton, edited by Trish Henley and Gary Taylor (2012). She is currently at work on a book-length study of animal familiars in early modern English literature. Brian Massumi is Professor of Communication at the University of Montreal. He specializes in the philosophy of experience, art and media theory, and political philosophy. His most recent books include Ontopower: War, Powers, and the State of Perception (2015), Politics of Affect (2015), and What Animals Teach Us About Politics (2014). He is co-author with Erin Manning of Thought in the Act: Passages in the Ecology of Experience (2014). Also with Erin Manning and the SenseLab collective, he participates in the collective exploration of new ways of bringing philosophical and artistic practices into collaborative interaction.