Literary Animal Studies in the Anthropocene
In 2000, the Nobel Prize-winning chemist Paul J. Crutzen and marine-science specialist Eugene Stoermer coined the term “Anthropocene” based on the assumption that the global impacts of human activities during the last 300 years are so significant and far-reaching in scale that they lead to a new geological epoch. The Anthropocene is adopted to signify the epoch subsequent to the Holocene in which human actions are shaping the planet so profoundly that they are now acting as a geological force. In this era, human activity is the dominant influence on the environment, and all lives on earth. This is the age we are currently living in, though debates about precisely when it began continue to rage. The term has not as yet officially accepted within the field of geology; however as a frame for understanding a period of geological time marked by the significant impact of human activity on the planet, the Anthropocene has “extraordinary potential”, and it is a “unique term simultaneously oriented to the past, present and future” (Human Animal viii). As Morten Tnnessen, Kristin Armstrong Oma argued, “no matter what one thinks about the Anthropocene, the notion radically changes how we look at nature, and mankind” (viii).
Sample Chapter(s)
Introduction (131 KB)
Components of the Book:
  • Head Page
  • Copyright
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Cats and Gaze: Cats in British and American Short Stories
  • Chapter 2. Bears as Others: Bears in American and Canadian Stories
  • Chapter 3. Human‐Elephant Community: Elephants in English Literature
  • Chapter 4. Whales as “Mirrors”: Whales in American Literature
  • Works Cited
Readership: Students, academics, teachers, and other people attending or interested in Literary Animal Studies.
1
Head Page
Jiang Lifu
PDF (57 KB)
3
Copyright
Jiang Lifu
PDF (110 KB)
4
Acknowledgements
Jiang Lifu
PDF (122 KB)
8
Introduction
Jiang Lifu
PDF (131 KB)
13
Chapter 1. Cats and Gaze: Cats in British and American Short Stories
Jiang Lifu
PDF (422 KB)
82
Chapter 2. Bears as Others: Bears in American and Canadian Stories
Jiang Lifu
PDF (855 KB)
161
Chapter 3. Human‐Elephant Community: Elephants in English Literature
Jiang Lifu
PDF (680 KB)
218
Chapter 4. Whales as “Mirrors”: Whales in American Literature
Jiang Lifu
PDF (717 KB)
284
Works Cited
Jiang Lifu
PDF (336 KB)
Jiang Lifu

Associate Professor of English at Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Nanjing, China. He specializes in the Anthropocene ecocriticism, climate fiction studies and the environmental humanities.

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