The question of what it means to be human has never before been
more difficult and more contested. The human, with a complicated
social history that his rarely been examined, remains entrenched in
traditional Enlightenment thinking. "Human, All Too Human"
considers how we might radicalize our notion of the human. Can the
human be thought outside humanism?
Any rethinking of the human places us immediately inside an
ever-widening field of contrasting labels: animate and inanimate,
natural and artificial, living and dead, organic and mechanistic.
These and other boundary confusions at the frontier of the human
are the subject of this volume, as each essay takes up one of three
disputed border identities: animals, things or children. "Human,
All Too Human" examines how we explain our interest in
anthropomorphism and our fascination with species categorizations.
Essays explore what we mean by "things" and how the integrity of
the human may already be compromised by them.
The nine essays in this volume all attempt to rethink the category
of the human, challenging some of our most cherished cultural
classifications. By inviting us to place the traditions subject of
knowledge in the unsettling position of object, these writers
interrogate the boundary distinctions that, until now, have
exempted the human from the vigilant analysis it so urgently
requires.
Contributors: Nancy Armstrong, Rey Chow, Drucilla Cornell, Diana
Fuss, Marjorie Garber, Barbara Johnson, Cora Kaplan, James Kincaid,
HarrietRitvo, David Willis
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