Writing About Animals in the Age of Revolution
Explores a broad canvas of canonical and non-canonical writing during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries to trace a connection between shifting attitudes to animals and the emergence of radical political claims based on universal rights.
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This is a book about animals in literature at the time of the French Revolution. It ranges widely over different genres and writers, from Sterne's Tristram Shandy to Wordsworth's, Coleridge's, and Clare's poems, from Barbauld's children's stories to Wollstonecraft's Rights of Woman, from Olaudah Equiano's slave autobiography to Thomas Spence's radical journal Pig's Meat, from natural history and philosophy to parliamentary debates, from sentimental novels to John Lawrence's chapter on the 'Rights of Beasts'. It shows how the discussion of human rights and freedoms was bound up with the representation of nonhuman animals, and how animal rights emerged as an extension of the rights of man and woman. There are chapters on animal sympathy, children's literature, feminism, abolition, political reform, and the anti-cruelty campaign. The special significance of donkeys, pigs, and apes is discussed, and a there is a discussion of visual propaganda with six illustrations.