Canis Modernis

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271088020

Human/Dog Coevolution in Modernist Literature

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By Karalyn Kendall-Morwick
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PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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HARDBACK
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216

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Description

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Modernism and the Canine Condition

1. Canine Origins: Jack London and Konrad Lorenz

2. Mongrelizing Form: Virginia Woolf’s Flush

3. The New Dog: Albert Payson Terhune and J. R. Ackerley

4. Dogging the Subject: Samuel Beckett and Emmanuel Levinas

Coda: Modernism and Literary Canine Studies

Notes

References

Index



“A long-overdue, definitive statement about the importance of dogs in modernist literary fictions by a rising star of a new generation in literary animal studies. Starting from the observation that ‘dogs populate a range of modernist texts yet remain notably absent from critical accounts of the period,” it fills a tremendous gap in understandings of how and why literary representations both reflect and influence the conceptual crisis of humanism that comes to a head in the twentieth century.”

—Susan McHugh, author of Love in a Time of Slaughters: Human-Animal Stories Against Genocide and Extinction

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