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The Birth of a Jungle - Animality in Progressive-Era U.S. Literature and Culture (Hardcover)
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The Birth of a Jungle - Animality in Progressive-Era U.S. Literature and Culture (Hardcover)
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Exemplifying a new methodology identified as'animality studies'
that focuses on constructions of animality at specific historical
and cultural moments, without the explicit emphasis on animal
advocacy that is often found in animal studies, this book explores
animality at the turn of the twentieth century in the United
States. At that moment, shifts in what it meant to be both 'human'
and 'animal' became crucial in terms of producing new ways of
thinking about a wide range of human behaviors, including
homosexuality, labor exploitation, and the lynching of black men.
The discourse of 'the jungle' was born at the confluence of Darwin
and Freud, once human behavior could be explained, supposedly, by
animal instincts that were naturally violent in the name of
survival and heterosexual in the name of reproduction. Literary and
cultural texts at the turn of the twentieth century produced new
ways of thinking about the 'beast within' shifting away from a
Protestant Christian formulation of a devilish inner beast that was
sinful and violent. But the central argument here is that
Darwinist-Freudian formulations of the human animal, despite
reigning critical interpretations, were often contested rather than
reinforced by writers such as Jack London, Henry James, Frank
Norris, Upton Sinclair, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and William James, as
well as cultural events such as a circus elephant publicly
electrocuted at Coney Island, an African man on display in the
Monkey House of the Bronx Zoo, and the Scopes "Monkey Trial."
Ultimately, this book reveals not only new ways of thinking about
familiar texts, but also the significance of the question of the
animal in relation to fields such as the history of sexuality,
studies of literary naturalism, and critical race studies within
American literary and cultural studies. The book reveals how the
figure of the animal evolved in U.S. literature and culture at the
turn of the century, particularly through the birth of the jungle:
a discourse that continues to enable enduring justifications of
homophobia, economic exploitation, and racism in the United States
and beyond.
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