The Animal Claim The Animal Claim

The Animal Claim

Sensibility and the Creaturely Voice

    • 12,99 €
    • 12,99 €

Descripción editorial

This "passionately eloquent" study shows the influence of eighteenth-century poetry on political theory, philosophy, and early discourse on animal rights (Helen Deutsch, University of California, Los Angeles).

During the eighteenth century, some of the most popular British poetry showed a responsiveness to animals that anticipated the later language of animal rights. Such poems were widely cited in later years by legislators advocating animal welfare laws. In The Animal Claim, Tobias Menely links this poetics of sensibility with Enlightenment political philosophy, the rise of the humanitarian public, and the fate of sentimentality, as well as longstanding theoretical questions about voice as a medium of communication.


In the Restoration and eighteenth century, philosophers emphasized the role of sympathy in collective life and began regarding the passionate expression humans share with animals, rather than the spoken or written word, as the elemental medium of community. Menely shows how poetry came to represent this creaturely voice and, by virtue of this advocacy, facilitated the development of a viable discourse of animal rights in the emerging public sphere.


Placing sensibility in dialogue with classical and early-modern antecedents as well as contemporary animal studies, The Animal Claim uncovers crucial connections between eighteenth-century poetry; theories of communication; and post-absolutist, rights-based politics.

GÉNERO
Ficción y literatura
PUBLICADO
2015
10 de abril
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
278
Páginas
EDITORIAL
The University of Chicago Press
INFORMACIÓN DEL PROVEEDOR
OpenRoad Integrated Media, LLC
TAMAÑO
3,4
MB
Climate and the Making of Worlds Climate and the Making of Worlds
2021
Anthropocene Reading Anthropocene Reading
2017