The Modern Bestiary
Animals in English Fiction, 1880-1945
- Author(s): David Barry Desmond Asker,
- Publisher: Edwin Mellen Press
- Pages: 202
- ISBN_10: 0773489088
ISBN_13: 9780773489080
- Language: en
- Categories: Fiction / Fairy Tales, Folk Tales, Legends & Mythology , Literary Criticism / General , Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh , Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / Nature , Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / Politics ,
Description:... This study explores different kinds of animal fiction written in English literature. Taking Darwin's The Origin of Species as a significant point of departure, it discusses such key authors as Hardy, Lawrence, Kipling, Wells, Orwell, and others, arguing that the variety and richness of this literature represents a revival in the fortunes of bestiary literature. In the Middle Ages, much animal literature was written and its burden was instruction of a moral kind. This study shows that modern British writers have turned to the world of animal nature, realistically, figuratively or fantastically, to find an alternative orientation to the world - a more satisfactory view of man's place in nature. The modern bestiarists represent a wide variety of fictional technique and an equally extensive range of thematic interest. Nonetheless, there is a consistency in the common idea that animals may effectively represent an objectified version of human life and so serve an educational function.
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