Civilized Creatures: Urban Animals, Sentimental Culture, and American Literature, 1850–1900JHU Press, 2005 M08 4 - 229 pages In Civilized Creatures, Jennifer Mason challenges some of our most enduring ideas about how encounters with nonhuman nature shaped American literature and culture. Mason argues that in the second half of the nineteenth century the most powerful influence on Americans' understanding of their affinities with animals was not increasing separation from the pastoral and the wilderness; instead, it was the population's feelings about the ostensibly civilized animals they encountered in their daily lives. Americans of diverse backgrounds, Mason shows, found it attractive as well as politic to imagine themselves as most closely connected to those creatures who shared humans' aptitude for civilized life. And to the minds of many in this period, national prosperity depended less on periodic exposure to untamed, wild nature than it did on the proper care and keeping of such animals within suburban and urban environments. Combining literary analysis with cultural histories of equestrianism, petkeeping, and the animal welfare movement, Civilized Creatures offers new readings of works by Susan Warner, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Charles W. Chesnutt. In each case, Mason demonstrates that understanding contemporary relationships between humans and animals is essential for understanding the debates about gender, race, and cultural power enacted in these texts. |
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... essays in American Prose , Houghton Mifflin editor Horace Scudder complained about the " protesting attitude " of Thore- au's work and maintained that his method " was against the common order of things , and therefore the results ...
... essay by Perry Miller that first appeared in 1955 and was later republished in Nature's Nation ( 1967 ) , whose title has become a shorthand for assertions about the primacy of wild nature to the " American literary imagination ...
... essay . Neither have we succeeded ( despite valiant efforts ) in van- quishing his equally central opposition ... Essays and Stories about Urban Nature.19 In the introduction to A Sand County Almanac ( 1949 ) —a text often hailed ...
... essay by Higginson quoted above ) that companion animals — and especially the dog - exhibited the qualities parents wished to inculcate in their children . By the 1870s ( as I explain in more detail in chapter 4 ) , dogs came to be ...
... essay arguing that human rather than nonhuman animals deserved the title " lower animals . " 61 Thus , although animals such as horses and dogs came to be regarded as the best of nonhuman animals for the most anthropocentric of reasons ...
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Enterprising Youth: Social Values and Acculturation in Nineteenth-century ... Monika Maria Elbert No preview available - 2008 |
For the Love of Animals: The Rise of the Animal Protection Movement Kathryn Shevelow No preview available - 2008 |