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English 341.301
Beast Culture: Animals, Identity, and Western Culture
Chi-ming Yang profile

TR 10:30-12
Fulfills Sector 4: Literature of the long 18th-century (ca. 1640-1832) of the English Standard Major
Fulfills Sector 5: 19th Century Literature of the English Standard Major
Fulfills Pre-1900 Seminar Requirement of the English Standard Major

In this course, we will explore the European fascination with animals in early modern print culture. How do understandings of animal difference inform what it means to be human previous to the 21st century?  How did practices like pet-keeping, horse racing, hunting, and zoos become such a central part of our modern day culture? 

Readings will include: philosophy of Descartes and Rousseau; classic novels like Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver’s Travels; 18th century scientific texts on species and race classification; radical vegetarian manifestos; cases of “wild children” raised by wolves; and publicized cultural hoaxes such as Mary Toft, an English woman who claimed to give birth to rabbits. Assignments will include several short essays and one final research paper on an animal of your choosing.



updated 2008-03-11
 
 
 
 


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Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
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