Animal Alterity uses readings of science fiction texts to explore the centrality of animals for our ways of thinking about human. It argues that the academic field of animal studies and the popular genre of science fiction share a number a critical concerns: thinking about otherness and the nature of human being; desiring communication across species difference; and interrogating the social and ethical consequences of changes in science and technology. We are living in a complex set of contradictory and conflicting relations with non-human animals. This book maps this complex terrain, arguing that we are better able to perceive options for a transformed politics if we perceive our various material relations with non-human animals within a deeper understanding of the functions of the category animal.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Animal Alterity: Science Fiction and Human-Animal Studies
1. Always-Already Meat: The Human-Animal Boundary and Ethics
2. The Mirror Test: Humans, Animals and Sentience
3. The Animal Responds: Language, Animals and Science Fiction
4. 'The Female Is Somewhat Duller': Gender and Animals
5. Sapien Orientalism: Animals, Colonialism, Science Fiction
6. Existing for Their Own Reasons: Animal Aliens
7. A Rope over an Abyss: Humans as Animals
8. The Modern Epimetheus: Animals and/as Technology Conclusion
'Other Fashionings of Life': Science Fiction, Human-Animal Studies and the Future of Subjectivity
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Sherryl Vint is Associate Professor Department of English Language and Literature, Brock University. She is the author of Bodies of Tomorrow: Technology, Subjectivity, and Science Fiction (University of Toronto Press, 2006) and co-editor of the journal of Science Fiction Film and Television (published by Liverpool University Press)
"This book challenged my thinking and extended my reading pleasure, and you can't ask for more than that."
- Professor Philip Armstrong, Co-director, New Zealand Centre for Human-Animal Studies, University of Canterbury
"Animal Alterity is an engaging, intelligent study which is perceptively and accessibly theorised, and refreshingly innovative."
- Dr Peter Wright, Edge Hill University