Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 Revisiting the 'Problem' of Anthropomorphism through Ceridwen Dovey’s Only the Animals (2014)
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'In Ceridwen Dovey’s short story cycle, Only the Animals, inter-textual allusions to established fictional animals are imposed onto settings of human conflict and ventriloquised through diverse animal subjects. This paper defends narrating from a non-human animal perspective, not as a radical act, but as a move to reinvigorate our conceptions of human-animal relations. Meaningful encounters between human and non-human animals are presented with a recognition of the impossibility of full and mutual inter-species understanding. The juxtaposition of the limits of figuring literary animals with human/animal intimacy and incomprehension marks Dovey’s work as a logical progression of some ideas presented in J. M. Coetzee’s Elizabeth Costello. This paper reads Dovey’s deployment of textual self-referentiality and overt intersection with Coetzee’s work in Only the Animals as a reflexive writing form that works to critique another representational dispossession: that of anthropocentric realism. Both works understand that humans do not share language with non-human animals but we often meet questions of the animal through stories. This makes the stories we tell highly significant; indeed – vital – components of the cultural landscape.'

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Last amended 9 Jul 2019 09:13:09
https://www.australianliterarystudies.com.au/issues/volume-34-no-1 Revisiting the 'Problem' of Anthropomorphism through Ceridwen Dovey’s Only the Animals (2014)small AustLit logo Australian Literary Studies
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