Karalyn Kendall-Morwick is Associate Professor of English at Washburn University.
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Description
"A compelling, deeply researched, and valuable study that takes up the question of the canine in modernism, in particular, to explore dogs' unique proximity to the human species and to describe how the coevolution of humans and dogs should be theorized as providing a special or charged site for examining modernist interspecies contingencies, interactions, and forms of ethical being-with. This notable book continues the exploration of modernism's significance for discussions of animals and animality in literature." -Carrie Rohman, author of Choreographies of the Living: Bioaesthetics in Literature, Art, and Performance "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 "Clearly written and grounded in both literary theory and animal studies, this work makes a substantial contribution to the literature of both disciplines." -R. D. Morrison, Choice