Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Pyke, Susan Mary, author

Title Animal visions : posthumanist dream writing / Susan Mary Pyke
Published Cham, Swiltzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2019]

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Series Palgrave studies in animals and literature
Palgrave studies in animals and literature.
Contents Introduction: emplaced readerly devotions -- Artful dream writing into the roots -- Ghosts: of writing, at windows, in mirrors, on moors -- Moor loving -- Respecting and trusting the beast -- Animal grace
Summary Animal Visions considers how literature responds to the harms of anthropocentricism, working with Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) and various adaptations of this canonistic novel to show how posthumanist dream writing unsettles the privileging of the human species over other species. Two feminist and post-Freudian responses, Kathy Acker's poem "Obsession" (1992) and Anne Carson's "The Glass Essay" (1997) most strongly extend Brontë's dream writing in this direction. Building on the trope of a ludic Cathy ghost who refuses the containment of logic and reason, these and other adaptations offer the gift of a radical peri-hysteria. This emotional excess is most clearly seen in Kate Bush's music video "Wuthering Heights" (1978) and Peter Kosminsky's film Wuthering Heights (1992). Such disturbances make space for a moor love that is particularly evident in Jane Urquhart's novel Changing Heaven (1989) and, to a lesser extent Sylvia Plath's poem, "Wuthering Heights" (1961). Brontë's Wuthering Heights and its most productive afterings make space for co-affective relations between humans and other animal beings. Andrea Arnold's film Wuthering Heights (2011) and Luis Buñuel's Abismos de Pasión (1954) also highlight the rupturing split gaze of non-acting animals in their films. In all of these works depictions of intra-active and entangled responses between animals show the potential for dynamic and generative multispecies relations, where the human is one animal amongst the kin of the world
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed March 25, 2019)
Subject Brontë, Emily, 1818-1848. Wuthering Heights.
SUBJECT Wuthering Heights (Brontë, Emily) fast
Subject Animals in literature.
Humanism in literature.
Fiction & related items.
Literary theory.
Literature: history & criticism.
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Literary.
Animals in literature
Humanism in literature
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9783030038779
3030038777