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Eighteenth-Century Poetry and the Rise of the Novel Reconsidered
begins with the brute fact that poetry jostled up alongside novels
in the bookstalls of eighteenth-century England. Indeed, by
exploring unexpected collisions and collusions between poetry and
novels, this volume of exciting, new essays offers a
reconsideration of the literary and cultural history of the period.
The novel poached from and featured poetry, and the "modern"
subjects and objects privileged by "rise of the novel" scholarship
are only one part of a world full of animate things and people with
indistinct boundaries. Contributors: Margaret Doody, David Fairer,
Sophie Gee, Heather Keenleyside, Shelley King, Christina Lupton,
Kate Parker, Natalie Phillips, Aran Ruth, Wolfram Schmidgen, Joshua
Swidzinski, and Courtney Weiss Smith.
In Animals and Other People, Heather Keenleyside argues for the
central role of literary modes of knowledge in apprehending animal
life. Keenleyside focuses on writers who populate their poetry,
novels, and children's stories with conspicuously figurative
animals, experiment with conventional genres like the beast fable,
and write the "lives" of mice as well as men. From such
writers-including James Thomson, Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift,
Laurence Sterne, Anna Letitia Barbauld, and others-she recovers a
key insight about the representation of living beings: when we
think and write about animals, we are never in the territory of
strictly literal description, relying solely on the evidence of our
senses. Indeed, any description of animals involves personification
of a sort, if we understand personification not as a rhetorical
ornament but as a fundamental part of our descriptive and
conceptual repertoire, essential for distinguishing living beings
from things. Throughout the book, animals are characterized by a
distinctive mode of agency and generality; they are at once moving
and being moved, at once individual beings and generic or species
figures (every cat is also "The Cat"). Animals thus become figures
with which to think about key philosophical questions about the
nature of human agency and of social and political community. They
also come into view as potential participants in that community, as
one sort of "people" among others. Demonstrating the centrality of
animals to an eighteenth-century literary and philosophical
tradition, Animals and Other People also argues for the importance
of this tradition to current discussions of what life is and how we
might live together.
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