Animal Presence and Human Identity in Modern Literature

(Dis)figurations of Humanimality from Shakespeare to Desai

Kimberly W Benston author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Anthem Press

Publishing:5th Aug '25

£80.00

This title is due to be published on 5th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Animal Presence and Human Identity in Modern Literature cover

Animal Presence and Human Identity in Modern Literature is an exploration of literary representations of the human-animal encounter in modernity that press human "being" to its limits. Texts studied include Shakespeare's King Lear, Eliot's Middlemarch, Wells's The Island of Doctor Moreau, Atwood's Surfacing, and Desai's Clear Light of Day.

Animal Presence and Human Identity in Modern Literature explores literary representations of the human-animal encounter in modernity that press human “being” to its limits. This project arises within the question, “can an animal die?,” formulated in response to Martin Heidegger’s famous assertion that, properly speaking, animals cannot “die” but can only “perish,” an assertion that sharply summarizes western “humanist” philosophical discourse – particularly as etched in the “modern turn” initiated by Descartes – in which the “human” emerges precisely as that (non)animal which enjoys a distinctive relation to both the inner essence and outer edge of existence. Alongside the philosophical continuum that stretches from the Cartesian reduction of animality to mechanistic re-action to the Heideggerian marginalization of animal life as active but unreflective materiality, literature develops a counter-examination of the human-animal nexus that variously implicates the animal in human ontology and explores that intersection as constitutive of social narratives and cultural institutions. Texts from Shakespeare to Desai have been selected for both their variety of formal and linguistic inflections of the human-animal encounter, and for their shared participation in an evolving discourse that is here termed “humanimality”: the ever-shifting interaction of human and nonhuman creatures that animates our still-evolving modernity.

ISBN: 9781785279607

Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 26mm

Weight: 454g

250 pages