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Imperial Beast Fables

Animals, Cosmopolitanism, and the British Empire
BookPaperback
Ranking79187inSprachen
CHF118.00

Description

This book coins the term 'imperial beast fable' to explore modern forms of human-animal relationships and their origins in the British Empire. Taking as a starting point the long nineteenth-century fascination with non-European beast fables, it examines literary reworkings of these fables, such as Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Books, in relation to the global politics of race, language, and species. The imperial beast fable figures variably as a key site where the nature and origins of mankind are hotly debated; an emerging space of conservation in which humans enclose animals to manage and control them; a cage in which an animal narrator talks to change its human jailors; and a vision of animal cosmopolitanism, in which a close kinship between humans and other animals is dreamt of. Written at the intersection of animal studies and postcolonial studies, this book proposes that the beast fable embodies the ideologies and values of the British Empire, while also covertly critiquingthem. It therefore finds in the beast fable the possibility that the multitudinous animals it gives voice to might challenge the imperial networks which threaten their existence, both in the nineteenth century and today.
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-3-030-51495-2
Product TypeBook
BindingPaperback
Publishing date30/07/2021
Edition1st ed. 2020
Pages268 pages
LanguageEnglish
SizeWidth 148 mm, Height 210 mm, Thickness 15 mm
Weight351 g
Article no.21965189
CatalogsBuchzentrum
Data source no.37126471
Product groupSprachen
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Series

Author

Kaori Nagai is Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Kent, UK. She is the author of Empire of Analogies: Kipling, India and Ireland (2006). She has edited Rudyard Kipling's Plain Tales from the Hills and The Jungle Books for Penguin Classics, and is the co-editor of Kipling and Beyond (2010), and Cosmopolitan Animals (2015).