Hemingway and Posthumanism
Ryan Hediger editor Marcos Antonio Norris editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:31st Oct '25
£100.00
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Ernest Hemingway is often recognised for his contributions to the intellectual and artistic experimentation of his day, including modernism, primitivism, naturalism and creative nonfiction. He has also long been situated in debates about the environment, often receiving criticism for his hunting practices and taken as iconic of an aggressive masculinity. This collection considers another influential artistic and intellectual formation that has particular resonance for reading Hemingway, despite postdating his life by more than a decade: posthumanism. The contributions highlight the many resonances between Hemingway's life and writing and the notions of posthumanism, including, for example: Hemingway’s emphasis on a human creaturely life; his insistence on human participation in genuine ecologies; his use of and writing about technologies and prosthetics (as in cases of injury); and his scepticism about forces of modernity, economic development, labour norms and more. The collection also shows how investigating Hemingway alongside posthumanism can yield new insights about this author and contribute to posthumanist thought and practice.
Rarely do you find a breakthrough anthology. This is one. Norris and Hediger provide a lucid introduction to posthumanism. They assemble a diverse collection of fine essays which demonstrate the relevance and freshness of this approach to both Hemingway the man and his works. -- Larry Grimes, Bethany College
ISBN: 9781399539616
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
304 pages