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Memorializing Animals during the Romantic Period (Paperback)
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Memorializing Animals during the Romantic Period (Paperback)
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Early nineteenth-century British literature is overpopulated with
images of dead and deadly animals, as Chase Pielak observes in his
study of animal encounters in the works of Charles and Mary Lamb,
John Clare, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, and William
Wordsworth. These encounters, Pielak suggests, coincide with
anxieties over living alongside both animals and cemeteries in the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth-centuries. Pielak traces the
linguistic, physical, and psychological interruptions occasioned by
animal encounters from the heart of communal life, the table, to
the countryside, and finally into and beyond the wild cemetery. He
argues that Romantic period writers use language that ultimately
betrays itself in beastly disruptions exposing anxiety over what it
means to be human, what happens at death, the consequences of
living together, and the significance of being remembered.
Extending his discussion past an emphasis on animal rights to an
examination of animals in their social context, Pielak shows that
these animal representations are both inherently important and a
foreshadowing of the ways we continue to need images of dead and
deadly Romantic beasts.
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