Animal Lives through Five Centuries of Art and Science
Who Knows If I am Not Subject to Knowledge?
Series: Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature;
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Product details:
- Publisher Springer Nature Switzerland
- Date of Publication 21 January 2026
- ISBN 9783032059765
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages301 pages
- Size 210x148 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations XVII, 301 p. 20 illus. 673
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Long description:
"
Animal Lives through Five Centuries of Art and Science confronts a deep paradox: humanity's greatest achievements in art, science, and philosophy have often relied on the systematic subjugation of animals. This pioneering interdisciplinary work traces how Western knowledge systems have turned animal suffering into spectacle and commodity, from Renaissance anatomy theaters where Leonardo da Vinci painted ermines as symbols of purity while their real-world counterparts were skinned for aristocratic fashion, to today's genetically engineered GloFish. Through six compelling case studies—including the extinction of the quagga, Victorian vivisection debates, and industrial farming—Ruth Y.Y. Hung shows how the same imagination fueling cultural progress has also been used to justify domination. Drawing on thinkers from Erich Auerbach to Donna Haraway, the book offers a radical rethinking of knowledge itself. It reveals that animals have only been understood through frameworks that either aestheticize or erase their lives. Yet, amid these histories of violence, moments of resistance appear: the defiant stare of a vivisected dog, Indigenous cosmologies honoring ecological kinship, and Buddhist deer challenging human-centered views. Hung advocates for ""interspecies reimagination,"" urging a shift from extraction to reciprocity, and calls on readers to develop a new ethics where knowledge serves rather than controls life.
" MoreTable of Contents:
Introduction: On Human Aggression.- 1. Mimesis: Sacrifices in the Bible, Oracle Bones, and the Greek Tragedies.- 2. Rational Realism: Specimens in the Italian Renaissance.- 3. Naturalism: Subjects in the Laboratory and the Experimental Novel.- 4. Fascist Aesthetics: The Pack from the Slaughterhouse.- 5. Fantastic Realism: Happy Meat in Happy Meals.- 6. Extinct Species in the Realism of Our Time.- Coda: Commemorating Animals in Literature.
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