Lexington Books
Pages: 116
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-66696-395-3 • Hardback • February 2025 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
978-1-66696-396-0 • eBook • November 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Ratul Nandi is assistant professor of English in Siliguri College, India.
Foreword Richard Kerridge
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Animal Poetics
Chapter 1: Animal Poetics and Coetzeean Ethics
Chapter 2: Animal poetics and Kafkan Stupidity
Chapter 3: Animal Poetics and Frankensteinic Monstrosity
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
"In this brilliant and provocative book, Ratul Nandi develops and deploys a notion of animal poetics to demonstrate not only that the human-animal divide is of our own making, but also that coming face-to-face with our inability to cross it, and thus encountering our own “stupidity,” is our only hope for transcending it."
— Kelly Oliver, Emerita Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University and author of Animal Lessons
In Animal Poetics and Literary Thinking, Nandi seeks to understand if animals can be knowable through literary fiction. In attempting to answer this question Nandi makes a clear case that anthropomorphic humanism has located animals through either their physicality or their social and literary construction. He then goes on to argue, through a close reading of three select texts, that animals are actually both more and less than these approaches would have us believe; that they are material-semiotic hybrids. Scholars and students of literature, animal studies, the humanities and arts will find this book offers a new and helpful way to consider 'animals'.
— Nik Taylor, University of Canterbury