Essai
Nouvelle parution
I. Kreilkamp, Persons, Animals, and the Victorian Novel

I. Kreilkamp, Persons, Animals, and the Victorian Novel

Publié le par Université de Lausanne

Persons, Animals, and the Victorian Novel

Ivan Kreilkamp

 

University of Chicago Press

ISBN: 9780226576374

240 p.

30,00 $

 

PRÉSENTATION

In the nineteenth century, richly-drawn social fiction became one of England’s major cultural exports. At the same time, a surprising companion came to stand alongside the novel as a key embodiment of British identity: the domesticated pet. In works by authors from the Brontës to Eliot, from Dickens to Hardy, animals appeared as markers of domestic coziness and familial kindness. Yet for all their supposed significance, the animals in nineteenth-century fiction were never granted the same fullness of character or consciousness as their human masters: they remain secondary figures. Minor Creatures re-examines a slew of literary classics to show how Victorian notions of domesticity, sympathy, and individuality were shaped in response to the burgeoning pet class. The presence of beloved animals in the home led to a number of welfare-minded political movements, inspired in part by the Darwinian thought that began to sprout at the time. Nineteenth-century animals may not have been the heroes of their own lives but, as Kreilkamp shows, the history of domestic pets deeply influenced the history of the English novel.

 

TABLE DES MATIÈRES

1. Home, Animal, Novel
2. Petted Things: Cruelty and Sympathy in the Brontës
3. Dying like a Dog in Dickens
4. Middlemarch’s Brute Life
5. Using and Pitying Animals in Thomas Hardy
6. Tracking Animal Agency in Conan Doyle and Hardy
7. “Infinite Compassion”: Nonhuman Life in Schreiner’s The Story of an African Farm
Acknowledgments
Notes
Works Cited
Index