Animal Writing

Storytelling, Selfhood and the Limits of Empathy

Danielle Sands author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:26th May '21

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Animal Writing cover

Combining recent insights from animal studies, critical plant studies and the new materialisms, Danielle Sands reads fiction and philosophy alongside each other to propose a method of thinking of and with animals that draws on a bestiary of affects. She challenges the claim that empathy should be primary mode of engagement with nonhuman life. Instead, she looks at the stories that we tell, and are told, by insects – beings at the edges of animal life. The indifference, even disgust, that these creatures evoke in us forms the basis for a new ethics not limited by empathy. Along the way she encounters fiction writers Yann Martel, Karen Joy Fowler, Han Kang and Jim Crace beside the philosophy of Graham Harman, Donna Haraway, Jacques Derrida and Roger Caillois.

This original work brings literary and philosophical insights to bear on the assessment of contemporary debates on human-animal relations in a range of interdisciplinary fields including new materialism, affect theory and posthumanism. With her customary elegance, Sands reflects on the metaphorical nature of perception and the complex relations between perception, imagination and cognition in our dealings with the nonhuman. Bold, provocative and highly enjoyable. * Rosi Braidotti, Utrecht University *

ISBN: 9781474439046

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 343g

224 pages