Tenacious of Life
The Quadruped Essays of John James Audubon and John Bachman
John James Audubon author John Bachman author Daniel Patterson editor Eric Russell editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:1st Jun '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Daniel Patterson and Eric Russell present a groundbreaking case for considering John James Audubon’s and John Bachman’s quadruped essays as worthy of literary analysis and redefine the role of Bachman, the perpetually overlooked coauthor of the essays. After completing The Birds of America (1826–38), Audubon began developing his work on the mammals. The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America volumes show an antebellum view of nature as fundamentally dynamic and simultaneously grotesque and awe-inspiring. The quadruped essays are rich with good stories about these mammals and the humans who observe, pursue, and admire them.
For help with the science and the essays, Audubon enlisted the Reverend John Bachman of Charleston, South Carolina. While he has been acknowledged as coauthor of the essays, Bachman has received little attention as an American nature writer. While almost all works that describe the history of American nature writing include Audubon, Bachman shows up only in a subordinate clause or two. Tenacious of Life strives to restore Bachman’s status as an important American nature writer.
Patterson and Russell analyze the coauthorial dance between the voices of Audubon, an experienced naturalist telling adventurous hunting stories tinged often by sentiment, romanticism, and bombast, and of Bachman, the courteous gentleman naturalist, scientific detective, moralist, sometimes cruel experimenter, and humorist. Drawing on all the primary and secondary evidence, Patterson and Russell tell the story of the coauthors’ fascinating, conflicted relationship. This collection offers windows onto the early United States and much forgotten lore, often in the form of travel writing, natural history, and unique anecdotes, all told in the compelling voices of Antebellum America’s two leading naturalists.
"Tenacious of Life is a great resource for individuals seeking primary sources that relate to the intersections of human and nonhuman history. Those interested in learning more about slavery, war, Manifest Destiny, and more through the lens of environmental history will find this book insightful."—Mette Flynt, Chronicles of Oklahoma
"This book should be of equal interest to historians and naturalists."—J. S. Schwartz, Choice
“Valuable and beautiful, if also haunting and provocative. This book fills a serious gap in our literature and gives cause for deep reflection as we stand on the verge of the human-caused Sixth Extinction. The introduction is superb, opening with an important discussion of the central role in the Audubon and Bachman essays of white supremacy, speciesism, slavery, and other forms of violence, and ending with a brief but illuminating comparison with Susan Fenimore Cooper and Henry David Thoreau—a fascinating, even riveting, treatment. The primary essays that follow are classics in natural history, full of energy, incident, and anecdote.”—Laura Dassow Walls, author of Henry David Thoreau: A Life
ISBN: 9781496213341
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
424 pages