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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press
    ISBN: 9781452963907 , 9781517909642
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (256 p.)
    Keywords: American fiction History and criticism 19th century ; Animals in literature ; Human-animal relationships in literature ; Animals in art ; Photography of animals ; Literature: history & criticism
    Abstract: Reading canonical works of the nineteenth century through the modern transformation of human–animal relations. From Audubon’s still-life watercolors to Muybridge’s trip-wire locomotion studies, from Melville’s epic chases to Poe’s detective hunts, the nineteenth century witnessed a surge of artistic, literary, and scientific treatments that sought to “capture” the truth of animals at the historical moment when animals were receding from everyday view. In Capture, Antoine Traisnel reveals how the drive to contain and record disappearing animals was a central feature and organizing pursuit of the nineteenth-century U.S. cultural canon. Capture offers a critical genealogy of the dominant representation of animals as elusive, precarious, and endangered that came to circulate widely in the nineteenth century. Traisnel argues that “capture” is deeply continuous with the projects of white settler colonialism and the biocapitalist management of nonhuman and human populations, demonstrating that the desire to capture animals in representation responded to and normalized the systemic disappearance of animals effected by unprecedented changes in the land, the rise of mass slaughter, and the new awareness of species extinction. Tracking the prototyping of biopolitical governance and capitalist modes of control, Traisnel theorizes capture as a regime of vision by which animals came to be seen, over the course of the nineteenth century, as at once unknowable and yet understood in advance—a frame by which we continue to encounter animals today
    Note: English
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9782728809875 , 9782728839520
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (178 p.)
    Series Statement: Actes de la recherche à l'ENS
    Keywords: Literature: history & criticism
    Abstract: Partant de l'idée que la Nouvelle-Angleterre désigne moins une région ou un territoire aux frontières clairement délimitées qu'elle ne figure un projet politique aux formes changeantes, cet ouvrage analyse le rôle prédominant qu'y a joué la littérature, non seulement en tant que production intellectuelle visant à s'émanciper du modèle culturel européen, mais aussi « en tant que littérature ». Du récit de captivité de Mary Rowlandson à Washington Irving, de Ralph Waldo Emerson à Henry David Thoreau, de Nathaniel Hawthorne à Susan Howe en passant par Emily Dickinson ou Henry James : qu'ils examinent les modalités de l'intrication du singulier et de la communauté ou qu'ils interrogent le rôle ambigu que jouent les lettres dans la constitution d'un espace commun, tous les articles s'accordent sur le fait que la littérature induit un rapport inédit au monde. Couvrant un intervalle de près de quatre siècles, ils montrent, chacun à sa manière, que la littérature de Nouvelle-Angleterre est toujours de nature politique, mais aussi, peut-être, que la politique est sans cesse travaillée par des pratiques de langage que la littérature invite à repenser
    Note: French
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