Threatening Animals?

Threatening predators and pernicious beasts continue to play significant roles in the human imaginary even as human threats to other species increase exponentially in the age of Anthropocene. While posthumanist animal studies and material ecocriticism sync human and other animals within the biospher...

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Main Author: Heather I. Sullivan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LED Edizioni Universitarie 2016-06-01
Series:Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/991
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spelling doaj-ea4b0e52c00743588ce6ea32123accd82020-11-25T03:28:59ZengLED Edizioni Universitarie Relations 2283-31962280-96432016-06-0141395210.7358/rela-2016-001-sull782Threatening Animals?Heather I. Sullivan0Professor of German, Trinity University, TexasThreatening predators and pernicious beasts continue to play significant roles in the human imaginary even as human threats to other species increase exponentially in the age of Anthropocene. While posthumanist animal studies and material ecocriticism sync human and other animals within the biosphere’s living interactions, our shared material reciprocity is currently skewing ever more towards the human threat to other species – and so to ourselves as co-dependents. This essay explores the meaning of “threatening” and “threatened”. Five German texts presenting human-animal interactions in the Anthropocene’s span by Goethe, Kafka, Stifter, Duve, and Trojanow unsettle expectations of threats. In Goethe’s “Novella”, an escaped lion and tiger enter German forests and are subdued, whereas Stifter’s “Brigitta” depicts a pastoral peace threatened by wolves. Kafka’s “Metamorphosis” re-shapes David Abram’s idea of “becoming animal”, and Karen Duve’s “Rain Novel” and Ilija Trojanow’s “Melting Ice”, recent climate change novels, juxtapose the human threat to the world’s climate with the onslaught of endless slugs and a biting penguin. Finally, the resurgence of wild boars in Berlin’s urban space in the past few years renegotiates human, nonhuman, and posthuman boundaries in an urban ecology.http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/991AnthropoceneanimalsPlumwoodGoetheStifterKafkaDuveTrojanowclimate changematerial ecocriticism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather I. Sullivan
spellingShingle Heather I. Sullivan
Threatening Animals?
Relations
Anthropocene
animals
Plumwood
Goethe
Stifter
Kafka
Duve
Trojanow
climate change
material ecocriticism
author_facet Heather I. Sullivan
author_sort Heather I. Sullivan
title Threatening Animals?
title_short Threatening Animals?
title_full Threatening Animals?
title_fullStr Threatening Animals?
title_full_unstemmed Threatening Animals?
title_sort threatening animals?
publisher LED Edizioni Universitarie
series Relations
issn 2283-3196
2280-9643
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Threatening predators and pernicious beasts continue to play significant roles in the human imaginary even as human threats to other species increase exponentially in the age of Anthropocene. While posthumanist animal studies and material ecocriticism sync human and other animals within the biosphere’s living interactions, our shared material reciprocity is currently skewing ever more towards the human threat to other species – and so to ourselves as co-dependents. This essay explores the meaning of “threatening” and “threatened”. Five German texts presenting human-animal interactions in the Anthropocene’s span by Goethe, Kafka, Stifter, Duve, and Trojanow unsettle expectations of threats. In Goethe’s “Novella”, an escaped lion and tiger enter German forests and are subdued, whereas Stifter’s “Brigitta” depicts a pastoral peace threatened by wolves. Kafka’s “Metamorphosis” re-shapes David Abram’s idea of “becoming animal”, and Karen Duve’s “Rain Novel” and Ilija Trojanow’s “Melting Ice”, recent climate change novels, juxtapose the human threat to the world’s climate with the onslaught of endless slugs and a biting penguin. Finally, the resurgence of wild boars in Berlin’s urban space in the past few years renegotiates human, nonhuman, and posthuman boundaries in an urban ecology.
topic Anthropocene
animals
Plumwood
Goethe
Stifter
Kafka
Duve
Trojanow
climate change
material ecocriticism
url http://www.ledonline.it/index.php/Relations/article/view/991
work_keys_str_mv AT heatherisullivan threateninganimals
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