Extinct and Undying Species: Animal Fetishism in Green Lion and How the Dead Dream

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE STUDIES IN THE NOVEL Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1353/sdn.2022.0032
Ida M. Olsen
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Abstract

Abstract:With theoretical grounding in a materialist ecocritical approach, this article considers two recent novels that stage human longing for contact with critically endangered species: Henrietta Rose-Innes’s Green Lion (2015) and Lydia Millet’s How the Dead Dream (2007). The article traces parallels between the characters’ animal fetishism—their mystical beliefs in the healing powers of animals—and what Nicole Shukin has theorized as an emerging ethos of neoliberal capitalism that obscures environmental destruction and nonhuman suffering by foregrounding animal vitality and flourishing within the capitalist system. Both novels invite a critical stance towards their respective characters’ animal fetishism, yet through the texts’ own animal representations the novels risk rendering nonhumans as spectral and ahistorical signifiers, contributing to the circulation of commercialized animal imagery. The novels thus risk colluding with a market regime bent on reproducing impressions of “undying animals,” as the sixth mass extinction of species unfolds.
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绝种与不死的物种:《绿狮》中的动物拜物教与死人如何做梦》
摘要:本文以唯物主义生态批判为理论基础,考察了最近两部描写人类渴望接触极度濒危物种的小说:亨丽埃塔·罗斯-英尼斯的《绿狮》(2015)和莉迪亚·米勒的《死者如何做梦》(2007)。这篇文章追溯了人物对动物的迷恋——他们对动物治愈能力的神秘信仰——与妮可·舒金(Nicole Shukin)理论化的新自由主义资本主义的新兴精神之间的相似之处,这种精神通过突出动物的活力和资本主义制度下的繁荣来掩盖环境破坏和非人类的痛苦。两部小说都对各自角色的动物恋物癖提出了批判立场,然而通过文本自身的动物表征,小说冒险将非人类呈现为光谱和非历史的能指,促进了商业化动物形象的流通。因此,随着第六次物种大灭绝的展开,这些小说冒着与市场体制勾结的风险,这种体制一心想再现“不死动物”的印象。
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来源期刊
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: From its inception, Studies in the Novel has been dedicated to building a scholarly community around the world-making potentialities of the novel. Studies in the Novel started as an idea among several members of the English Department of the University of North Texas during the summer of 1965. They determined that there was a need for a journal “devoted to publishing critical and scholarly articles on the novel with no restrictions on either chronology or nationality of the novelists studied.” The founding editor, University of North Texas professor of contemporary literature James W. Lee, envisioned a journal of international scope and influence. Since then, Studies in the Novel has staked its reputation upon publishing incisive scholarship on the canon-forming and cutting-edge novelists that have shaped the genre’s rich history. The journal continues to break new ground by promoting new theoretical approaches, a broader international scope, and an engagement with the contemporary novel as a form of social critique.
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