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Romantic Beasts: Pervasion, Eccentricity, Exhibition [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, kaal: 454 g, 10 color and 17 B-W images
  • Sari: Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Rutgers University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1684485568
  • ISBN-13: 9781684485567
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x156 mm, kaal: 454 g, 10 color and 17 B-W images
  • Sari: Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Aug-2025
  • Kirjastus: Rutgers University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1684485568
  • ISBN-13: 9781684485567
"By staging human-animal encounters, Romantic literature and art repeatedly questioned how 'human' animals could be, and how 'animal' humans in fact are. Romantic-era authors and artists often depicted perplexing animal intrusions upon humans. Sometimes the intruders were mystifying or terrifying, like Coleridge's albatross or Poe's raven; sometimes they were mundane, as in "The Swallow" by Smith or "To A Mouse" by Burns--regardless, encounters with animal-others occasioned Romantic musings. This collection builds on existing scholarship while deploying new methodological approaches from gender studies, posthumanism, postcolonialism, disability studies, and digital studies to deepen our understanding of why animal-human encounters were so prevalent in the creative work and cultural discourse of the Romantic period, including the rhetoric of social movements like transatlantic abolitionism. Taken together, the chapters demonstrate the range and complexity of Romantic representations of human-animal interactions and conceptualizations of animality, non-human life, and not-wholly-human life."--

Building on two decades of scholarship, this collection presents a wide array of current scholarly projects on the intersection of Romanticism and animal studies, renewing the call for more exploration of how the figure of the animal pervades Romantic texts during the age of revolutions.

By staging human-animal encounters, Romantic literature and art repeatedly questioned how "human" animals could be and how "animal" humans in fact are. Romantic-era authors and artists often depicted perplexing animal intrusions upon humans. Sometimes the intruders were mystifying or terrifying, like Coleridge’s albatross or Poe’s raven; sometimes they were mundane, as in “The Swallow” by Smith or “To a Mouse” by Burns—regardless, encounters with animal-others occasioned Romantic musings. This collection builds on existing scholarship while deploying new methodological approaches from gender studies, posthumanism, postcolonialism, disability studies, and digital studies to deepen our understanding of why animal-human encounters were so prevalent in the creative work and cultural discourse of the Romantic period, including the rhetoric of social movements like transatlantic abolitionism. Taken together, the chapters demonstrate the range and complexity of Romantic representations of human-animal interactions and conceptualizations of animality, nonhuman life, and not-wholly-human life.
 
Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.

Arvustused

"An excellent addition to the ever-expanding field of animal studies, Romantic Beasts invites consideration of non-human animals large and small, domesticated and wild, both familiar and exotic to the nineteenth-century European public. Here are animals on page and stage and in the plastic arts, real and allegorical, in chapters sure to stimulate wider explorations." -- Glynis Ridley * coeditor of Robinson Crusoe after 300 Years * "Romantic Beasts enriches our discussions of the other-than-human, reaching across prominent as well as popular works in English, German, and French Romanticism, and connecting animal studies with race, slavery, and imperialism. These new perspectives will shape our understanding of literary animals, and extend the lively current debates around posthumanist, environmentalist, and affective approaches." -- Laura Brown * author of The Counterhuman Imaginary: Earthquakes, Lapdogs, and Traveling Coinage in Eighteenth-Cent * "In its timely and authoritative discussion of animals in the context of Romanticism, this grouping of essays edited by Michael Demson and Christopher R. Clason offers a gap-filling understanding of an important locus of early nineteenth-century literary imagery. Informed by a wide array of texts, these studies are full of fascinating details and illuminating moments, all well-written and often corrective. Also a judicious compilation and integration of insights, this assemblage of studies also suggests, by implication, taking a new look at Romanticism itself. Romantic Beasts is a welcome contribution to literary history and criticism and a must-read for anyone interested in animalia and its cultural connections." -- Larry H. Peer * editor of Transgressive Romanticism * "By drawing on the diverse but complementary perspectives of Romanticism and animal studies, Romantic Beasts advances the study of both fields to a new international and interdisciplinary level. This innovative and exciting collection of wide-ranging scholarly essays, expertly curated and comprehensively introduced by the two editors, is a fitting tribute to the polymathic Romanticism expertise of Professor Burwick to whom this volume is dedicated." -- Eugene Stelzig * author of The Romantic Subject in Autobiography: Rousseau and Goethe *

Introduction
Michael Demson and Christopher R. Clason
Part One: The Pervasion of Animal Figures
Chapter 1: Animals in Abolition
Alastair Hunt
Chapter 2: Imperial Animals and Aboriginal People: Collecting the South
Pacific in Mary Ann Parkers A Voyage Round the World
Pamela Buck
Chapter 3: The Politics of the Pig from Burke to Beckett
John Gardner
Part Two: The Eccentricity of Animal Figures
Chapter 4: Familiarity and Flights of Imagination: Romantic Birds
Jane Spencer
Chapter 5: The Poodles Perspective in E.T.A. Hoffmanns Lebensansichten des
Katers Murr
Christopher R. Clason
Chapter 6: Weird Creatures: Romantic-era Zoophytes, The Great Chain of
Being, and Posthumanist Life
Allison Dushane
Part Three: The Exhibition of Human-Animal Entanglements
Chapter 7: The Monkey Artist and His Donkey Public: French Art-World
Caricature, the Animal Menagerie, and the Digital Humanities
Kathryn Desplanque
Chapter 8: Horse Paintings: Problems of Communication and Politics in French
Romantic Painting
Peter Erickson
Chapter 9: The Beasts of Romantic Melodrama
Frederick Burwick
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index

Introduction 1
Michael Demson and Christopher R. Clason
PA R T O N E : The Pervasion of
Animal Figures
1 Animals in Abolition 19
Alastair Hunt
2 Imperial Animals and Aboriginal People:
Collecting the South Pacific in Mary Ann Parkers
A Voyage Round the World 38
Pamela Buck
3 The Politics of the Pig from Burke to Beckett 53
John Gardner
PA R T TWO : The Eccentricity of
Animal Figures
4 Familiarity and Flights of Imagination:
Romantic Birds 73
Jane Spencer
5 The Poodles Perspective in E.T.A. Hoffmanns
Lebensansichten des Katers Murr 91
Christopher R. Clason
6 Weird Creatures: Romantic-Era
Zoophytes, the
Great
Chain of Being, and Posthumanist Life 112
Allison Dushane
PA R T T H R E E : The Exhibition of
Human-Animal
Entanglements
7 The Monkey Artist and His Donkey Public:
French Art-World
Caricature, the Animal
Menagerie, and the Digital Humanities 133
Kathryn Desplanque
8 Horse
Paintings: Problems
of Communication
and Politics in French Romantic Painting 161
Peter Erickson
9 The Beasts of Romantic Melodrama 181
Frederick Burwick
Acknowledgments
201
Bibliography 203
Notes on Contributors 221
Index 000
MICHAEL DEMSON is a professor of English at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas.   CHRISTOPHER R. CLASON is a professor emeritus at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan.