Renaissance beasts: of animals, humans and other wonderful creatures
Fudge, Erica, ed. (2004) Renaissance beasts: of animals, humans and other wonderful creatures. University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago.
Full text not available in this repository.Abstract
Where are all the animals in history? Renaissance Beasts begins to answer that question by exploring numerous ways in which animals played a key role in Renaissance culture: as werewolves, meat, performers, experimental tools. Animals, as Lévi-Strauss wrote, are good to think with. This collection addresses and reassesses the variety of ways in which animals were used and thought about in Renaissance culture, challenging contemporary as well as historic views of the boundaries and hierarchies humans presume the natural world to contain. Taking as its starting point the popularity of speaking animals in sixteenth-century literature and ending with the decline of the imperial Ménagerie during the French Revolution, Renaissance Beasts uses the lens of human-animal relationships to view issues as diverse as human status and power, diet, civilization and the political life, religion and anthropocentrism, spectacle and entertainment, language, science and skepticism, and domestic and courtly cultures. Within these pages scholars from a variety of disciplines discuss numerous kinds of texts--literary, dramatic, philosophical, religious, political--by writers including Calvin, Montaigne, Sidney, Shakespeare, Descartes, Boyle, and Locke. Through analysis of these and other writers, Renaissance Beasts uncovers new and arresting interpretations of Renaissance culture and the broader social assumptions glimpsed through views on matters such as pet ownership and meat consumption.
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Item type: Book ID code: 29500 Dates: DateEvent2004PublishedSubjects: Language and Literature > Literature (General) > Literary History
History General and Old World > History (General) > Medieval History
Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > Philosophy (General)Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Humanities > English Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 02 Jun 2011 11:52 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 15:41 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/29500