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Thomas Hardy and Animals

Thomas Hardy and Animals

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Anna West
Cambridge University Press, 4/30/2017
EAN 9781107179172, ISBN10: 1107179173

Hardcover, 218 pages, 23.5 x 15.7 x 1.7 cm
Language: English

Thomas Hardy and Animals examines the human and nonhuman animals who walk and crawl and fly across and around the pages of Hardy's novels. Animals abound in his writings, yet little scholarly attention has been paid to them so far. This book fills this gap in Hardy studies, bringing an important author within range of a new and developing area of critical inquiry. It considers the way Hardy's representations of animals challenged ideas of human-animal boundaries debated by the Victorian scientific and philosophical communities. In moments of encounter between humans and animals, Hardy questions boundaries based on ideas of moral sense or moral agency, language and reason, the possession of a face, and the capacity to suffer and perceive pain. Through an emphasis on embodied encounters, his writings call for an extension of empathy to others, human or nonhuman. In this accessible book Anna West offers a new approach to Hardy criticism.

Introduction
Hardy's 'shifted [...] centre of altruism'
an ethics of encounter and empathy
1. What does it mean to be a creature?
2. 'The only things we believe in are the sheep and the dogs'
3. 'Artful' creatures, part one
animal language
4. 'Artful' creatures, part two
can a snake have a face?
5. 'Artful' creatures, part three
'pre-posthumanist' Hardy
6. Useful creatures
rethinking Hardy's humanitarianism.