Humans and Other Animals in Eighteenth-Century British Culture

Humans and Other Animals in Eighteenth-Century British Culture

Representation, Hybridity, Ethics

Palmeri, Frank

Taylor & Francis Ltd

06/2020

246

Mole

Inglês

9781138255876

15 a 20 dias

460

Descrição não disponível.
Contents: Introduction: Representation, hybridity, ethics, Frank Palmeri; Gross metempsychosis and Eastern soul, Chi-ming Yang; The Lady and the Lapdog: mixed ethnicity in Constantinople, fashionable pets in Britain, Theresa Braunschneider; Gulliver's Travels and studies of skin color in the Royal Society, Cristina Malcolmson; Gulliver the Houyahoo: Swift, Locke, and the ethics of excessive individualism, Allen Michie; The autocritique of fables, Frank Palmeri; Animal nomenclature: facing other animals, Richard Nash; Man's animal nature: science, art, and satire in Thomas Rowlandson's 'studies in comparative anatomy', Arline Meyer; 'Listen to me': Frankenstein as an appeal to mercy and justice, on behalf of the persecuted animals, Stephanie Rowe; Shelley's great chain of being: from 'blind worms' to 'new-fledged eagles', Lisbeth Chapin; Gulliver and the lives of animals, Jonathan Lamb; Animal, vegetable, mineral: the play of species in Pynchon's Mason & Dixon, Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds; Bibliography; Index.
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Oriental Tales;hybridity;Animal Kingdom;human-animal pairings;Blind Worms;rationalizing spirit;Human Beings;eighteenth-century British culture;Human Kind;Early Enlightenment Debates;Book III;Animal Studies;General Stud Book;Human Animal Relations;Non-human Animals;Gulliver's Description;Martinus Scriblerus;Binomial Nomenclature;Exotic Pets;Act III;Human Woe;Talking Dog;Prometheus Unbound;Exotic Luxury Goods;Gay's Fables;Animal Nomenclature;Gate Ways;East Indies;Nonhuman Animal