Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Thomas Hardy and Animals

View through CrossRef
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.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Thomas Hardy and Animals
Description:
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.

Related Results

Thomas Hardy
Thomas Hardy
Thomas Hardy was born in Lower Bockhampton, Dorset, in 1840 and, with brief interruptions, continued to live in and around Dorchester until his death in 1928. His work was intimate...
The Brazilian translations of Thomas Hardy's novels
The Brazilian translations of Thomas Hardy's novels
Abstract This paper examines the existing Brazilian Portuguese translations of Thomas Hardy's novels, drawing attention to the specific probl...
Ictogenesis
Ictogenesis
*Michel Le Van Quyen, †Pascale Quilichini, †Yehezkel Ben‐Ari, †Christophe Bernard, and †Henri Gozlan ( *Neurodynamics Group, LENA‐CNRS UPR640, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, Paris , an...
Because Neglect Isn't Cute: Tuxedo Stan's Campaign for a Humane World
Because Neglect Isn't Cute: Tuxedo Stan's Campaign for a Humane World
On 10 September 2012, a cat named Tuxedo Stan launched his campaign for mayor of the Halifax Regional Municipality in Nova Scotia, Canada (“Tuxedo Stan for Mayor”). Backed by his h...
The Later Years of Thomas Hardy, 1892–1928
The Later Years of Thomas Hardy, 1892–1928
The great English novelist and poet Thomas Hardy (1840–1928) worked with his second wife, Florence, on this account of his life. It was published under her name, in two separate vo...
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
Slow Fire: Serial Thinking and Hardy's Genres of Induction
This essay considers the use of “serial thinking”—an approach to representation and cognition that emphasizes repetition, enumeration, and aggregation—in the work of Thomas Hardy. ...
Hardy’s Trees
Hardy’s Trees
Maxwell Sater, “Hardy's Trees: Ecology and the Question of Knowledge in The Woodlanders” (pp. 92–115) This essay attends to one of the stranger episodes in Thomas Ha...
The End of the Farm? Thomas Hardy’s Agricultural Vision
The End of the Farm? Thomas Hardy’s Agricultural Vision
In his depictions of rural life in semi-fictional Wessex, Thomas Hardy has sometimes been charged with romanticising rural life and portraying the pastoral instead of the real. His...

Back to Top