The writer discusses the possibility of writing an animal's biography. It may be too simple to assume that anthropocentrism—a belief in the centrality and superiority of human beings—is the reason why the concept of biography has always been applied uniquely to humans. To write a “life” may not just be to present a series of “facts” but to bear testimony to that individual's capacity to communicate through language the subject's own self-understanding. Using this rationale, the subject of biography is always potentially the subject of autobiography. The exclusion of animals from the Dictionary of National Biography does not just demonstrate the ongoing anthropocentrism of history as a discipline, but it also demonstrates the continuation of...
As oral and written record reflects, throughout history humankind has vacillated between acknowledgi...
Over recent decades major social changes and rapid technological advances have occurred in the West....
Nothing is more our own than our biography. Even the body, in which we spend our whole life, from bi...
The writer discusses the possibility of writing an animal's biography. It may be too simple to assum...
What does it mean to take animal autobiography seriously and how can we account for the representati...
What does it mean to take animal autobiography seriously and how can we account for the representati...
In engaging with acts of self-narration that cross species lines, creators of animal autobiographies...
Review of: Éric Baratay, Animal Biographies: Toward a History of Individuals. Translated by Lindsa...
Those of us who attempt to write about nonhuman animals are all implicated by the pun that appears i...
In The New Biography, Virginia Woolf notes that there is a paradox inherent to the genre of biograph...
The danger when discussing evolution, in any field, is to imagine that it is a linear process—a tele...
It is orthodox to suppose that very few, if any, nonhuman animals are persons. The category “person”...
Pursuing Animal History as Body History, this paper focuses neither on animals nor on humans, but ra...
Focusing on Franz Kafka’s “Investigations of a Dog” (1922), Samuel Beckett’s Molloy (1955), and Paul...
International audienceAbstract The biographies of animal celebrities published by the historians Joh...
As oral and written record reflects, throughout history humankind has vacillated between acknowledgi...
Over recent decades major social changes and rapid technological advances have occurred in the West....
Nothing is more our own than our biography. Even the body, in which we spend our whole life, from bi...
The writer discusses the possibility of writing an animal's biography. It may be too simple to assum...
What does it mean to take animal autobiography seriously and how can we account for the representati...
What does it mean to take animal autobiography seriously and how can we account for the representati...
In engaging with acts of self-narration that cross species lines, creators of animal autobiographies...
Review of: Éric Baratay, Animal Biographies: Toward a History of Individuals. Translated by Lindsa...
Those of us who attempt to write about nonhuman animals are all implicated by the pun that appears i...
In The New Biography, Virginia Woolf notes that there is a paradox inherent to the genre of biograph...
The danger when discussing evolution, in any field, is to imagine that it is a linear process—a tele...
It is orthodox to suppose that very few, if any, nonhuman animals are persons. The category “person”...
Pursuing Animal History as Body History, this paper focuses neither on animals nor on humans, but ra...
Focusing on Franz Kafka’s “Investigations of a Dog” (1922), Samuel Beckett’s Molloy (1955), and Paul...
International audienceAbstract The biographies of animal celebrities published by the historians Joh...
As oral and written record reflects, throughout history humankind has vacillated between acknowledgi...
Over recent decades major social changes and rapid technological advances have occurred in the West....
Nothing is more our own than our biography. Even the body, in which we spend our whole life, from bi...