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1
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0008987584
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Eating Well, or the calculation of the subject: An interview with jacques derrida
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Eduardo Cadava, Peter Connor, and Jean-Luc Nancy (ed.) (London and New York: Routledge)
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Jacques Derrida, ,Eating Well, or the Calculation of the Subject: An Interview with Jacques Derrida, in Eduardo Cadava, Peter Connor, and Jean-Luc Nancy (ed.), Who Comes After the Subject? (London and New York: Routledge, 1991), p. 112
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(1991)
Who Comes after the Subject?
, pp. 112
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Derrida, J.1
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2
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0004227733
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London and New York: Routledge
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Nick Fiddes, Meat: A Natural Symbol (London and New York: Routledge, 1991), p. 2
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(1991)
Meat: A Natural Symbol
, pp. 2
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Fiddes, N.1
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3
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77950120163
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Fiddes Meat p. 65
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Fiddes, Meat, p. 65
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4
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0002241413
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Myth today
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(1972, reprinted London: Vintage)
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Roland Barthes, ,Myth Today, in Mythologies, translated by Annette Lavers (1972, reprinted London: Vintage, 1993), p. 129
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(1993)
Mythologies Translated by Annette Lavers
, pp. 129
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Barthes, R.1
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5
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0040946784
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Steak and chips
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Barthes, ,Steak and Chips" in Mythologies, pp. 62-63
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Mythologies
, pp. 62-63
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Barthes1
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6
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77950158219
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The masculine pronoun and ,man, are used deliberately here. Carving as a masculine domain has its history in the presence in wealthy medieval and early modern households of a male servant with a special skill in carving. As households became smaller so this specialist role was taken up by other members of the household, and ultimately by the head of the household himself. Hence it remains conventional in many homes in the UK in which the male partner may have little to do with the preparation of food at any other time he has the role of carving the meat on special occasions. This was certainly the case in my own childhood home
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The masculine pronoun and ,man, are used deliberately here. Carving as a masculine domain has its history in the presence in wealthy medieval and early modern households of a male servant with a special skill in carving. As households became smaller so this specialist role was taken up by other members of the household, and ultimately by the head of the household himself. Hence it remains conventional in many homes in the UK in which the male partner may have little to do with the preparation of food at any other time he has the role of carving the meat on special occasions. This was certainly the case in my own childhood home
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7
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0003833028
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Questions of visibility and invisibility are significant in another way in, (Cambridge: Polity) . She argues that ,Through butchering, animals become absent references. Animals in name and body are made absent as animals for meat to exist
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Questions of visibility and invisibility are significant in another way in Carol J. Adams, The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory (Cambridge: Polity, 1990). She argues that ,Through butchering, animals become absent references. Animals in name and body are made absent as animals for meat to exist, (p. 40)
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(1990)
The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory
, pp. 40
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Adams, C.J.1
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8
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77950136749
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I have been unable to verify my recollection of this suggestion which was perhaps made in a radio interview rather than in print. I am grateful, however, to Su Taylor at the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain, for attempting to help me track it down
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I have been unable to verify my recollection of this suggestion which was perhaps made in a radio interview rather than in print. I am grateful, however, to Su Taylor at the Vegetarian Society of Great Britain, for attempting to help me track it down
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9
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77950156461
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Fiddes
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Fiddes, Meat, p. 14
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Meat
, pp. 14
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11
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77950131080
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I use ,not edible, rather than ,inedible, here and throughout to signal the distinction between what is inedible because poisonous or disgusting and what is not edible because of the prohibitions attached to it. In this sense, horse is not edible because it is perceived to be a non-meat animal for cultural rather than gustatory reasons in the UK. Parts of the fugu - also known as the blow fish - are inedible because highly toxic
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I use ,not edible, rather than ,inedible, here and throughout to signal the distinction between what is inedible because poisonous or disgusting and what is not edible because of the prohibitions attached to it. In this sense, horse is not edible because it is perceived to be a non-meat animal for cultural rather than gustatory reasons in the UK. Parts of the fugu - also known as the blow fish - are inedible because highly toxic
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12
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84968124426
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The family pet
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So - as an aside - to say that eating is a fundamental part of human life is to miss out the fact that, on numerous occasions, what is truly fundamental comes before and informs the decision as to what is edible. What is really essential when thinking about meat are the categories into which animals are placed (meat/non-meat exists alongside and inseparable from, for example, non-pet/pet; non-vermin/vermin etc.) It is, you might say, the categories that produce the taste. On the significance of the non-pet/pet distinction and questions of edibility
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So - as an aside - to say that eating is a fundamental part of human life is to miss out the fact that, on numerous occasions, what is truly fundamental comes before and informs the decision as to what is edible. What is really essential when thinking about meat are the categories into which animals are placed (meat/non-meat exists alongside and inseparable from, for example, non-pet/pet; non-vermin/vermin etc.) It is, you might say, the categories that produce the taste. On the significance of the non-pet/pet distinction and questions of edibility see Marc Shell, ,The Family Pet" Representations 15 (1986), pp. 121-153
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(1986)
Representations
, vol.15
, pp. 121-153
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Shell, M.1
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13
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79957374709
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[accessed 29 September 2008]
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See, for example, http:// www.ridingsteers1.netfirms.com/ [accessed 29 September 2008]
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14
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77950174981
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Of course there are contradictions within vegetarianism in that, as Peter Singer made so uncomfortably clear in Animal Liberation, the dairy industry is inseparable from the meat industry, and thus to drink milk, for example, is to support the practices of meat production. The logical solution here is to become a vegan, a practice wherein animal flesh and all other animal by-products - milk, leather, eggs, wool, honey - are avoided. See Singer, Animal Liberation (1975), 2nd ed. (London: Jonathan Cape, 1990), pp. 95-157. Other potential contradictions within vegetarian practice might include, for example, the status of road kill: an animal living outside of the restrictions of the food industry and killed accidentally can be acceptable food for vegans. Likewise, the status of what might be termed voluntary cannibalism - where a person offers themselves to be someone else,s meat - may not exist in contradiction with the ethics of veganism in that here the provision of one,s flesh for consumption is self-willed, and not imposed by an outside agency, and thus the power relations inherent in the meat industry are absent. For the purposes of this essay I am thinking about vegetarianism in its broadest terms to mean a diet that avoids the flesh of any self-moving non-human animal
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(1990)
Animal Liberation (1975)
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17
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The graphic nature of Plutarch,s words is, of course, central though. In The Lives of Animals J. M. Coetzee presents ,The Plutarch Response, as the position of his central character Elizabeth Costello: ,Plutarch is a real conversation stopper: it is the word juices that does it. Producing Plutarch is like throwing down a gauntlet: after that, there is no knowing what will happen, Amy Gutmann (ed.) (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press)
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The graphic nature of Plutarch,s words is, of course, central though. In The Lives of Animals J.M. Coetzee presents ,The Plutarch Response, as the position of his central character Elizabeth Costello: ,Plutarch is a real conversation stopper: it is the word juices that does it. Producing Plutarch is like throwing down a gauntlet: after that, there is no knowing what will happen,. Coetzee, The Lives of Animals, Amy Gutmann (ed.) (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999), p. 38
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(1999)
Coetzee, the Lives of Animals
, pp. 38
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18
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0347798532
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Albert the great on the language of animals
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The emphasis on animal voice sets Plutarch apart from orthodox ideas in which speech is regarded as a significant moral marker - and speech, of course, is only human. for example
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The emphasis on animal voice sets Plutarch apart from orthodox ideas in which speech is regarded as a significant moral marker - and speech, of course, is only human. See, for example, Irven M. Resnick and Kenneth F. Kitchell Jr., ,Albert The Great on the Language of Animals" American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 70.1 (1996), pp. 41-61
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(1996)
American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly
, vol.701
, pp. 41-61
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Resnick, I.M.1
Kitchell Jr., K.F.2
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19
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0004347079
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The merchant of venice
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GaryTaylor and Stanley Wells (ed.) (Oxford: Clarendon)
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William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice, in GaryTaylor and Stanley Wells (ed.), The Oxford Shakespeare (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988), 3.1, 59-60
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(1988)
The Oxford Shakespeare
, vol.31
, pp. 59-60
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Shakespeare, W.1
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20
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77950157747
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On abstinence from the flesh of living beings
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Porphyry, Williams (ed.)
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Porphyry, On Abstinence from the Flesh of Living Beings in Williams (ed.), Ethics of Diet, p. 70
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Ethics of Diet
, pp. 70
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21
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77950169225
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These and other statistics are collected at the Vegetarian Society of the UK,s website: [accessed 29 September 2008]
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These and other statistics are collected at the Vegetarian Society of the UK,s website: http:// www.vegsoc.org/Info/statveg.html [accessed 29 September 2008]
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77950148785
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This failure of Plutarch,s and Plutarchan,s arguments to take power in England is not because they disappeared or were not voiced. I have traced the significance of just this kind of thinking in early modern England in my Brutal Reasoning: Animals, Rationality and Humanity in Early Modern England (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006). What is significant is how far this way of thinking was effaced in post-Cartesian (and especially in modern) thinking
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This failure of Plutarch,s and Plutarchan,s arguments to take power in England is not because they disappeared or were not voiced. I have traced the significance of just this kind of thinking in early modern England in my Brutal Reasoning: Animals, Rationality and Humanity in Early Modern England (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006). What is significant is how far this way of thinking was effaced in post-Cartesian (and especially in modern) thinking
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0004296633
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translated by R.J. Batten (London: Blackfriars)
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See Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, translated by R.J. Batten (London: Blackfriars, 1975), pp. 19-21
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(1975)
Summa Theologiae
, pp. 19-21
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Aquinas, T.1
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24
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79957221624
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Importantly, in the context of my discussion of cannibalism below, the tiger Richard Parker is named after the cabin boy on the Mignonette which went down in the South Atlantic in 1884. This cabin boy was killed and eaten by the three other survivors of the wreck who were then picked up by another vessel. On their return to England the survivors confessed their crime and two were tried, found guilty and given a death sentence which was commuted to 6 months hard labour. ,R v Dudley and Stephens, (1884) established the legal precedent that ,necessity, is not a defence against murder. [accessed 12 October 2008]. It is strangely appropriate that I - a person called Fudge - am a distant relative of Richard Parker (a fact I owe to my Auntie Doll and to my cousin Ian Hunter,s genealogical research)
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Importantly, in the context of my discussion of cannibalism below, the tiger Richard Parker is named after the cabin boy on the Mignonette which went down in the South Atlantic in 1884. This cabin boy was killed and eaten by the three other survivors of the wreck who were then picked up by another vessel. On their return to England the survivors confessed their crime and two were tried, found guilty and given a death sentence which was commuted to 6 months hard labour. ,R v Dudley and Stephens, (1884) established the legal precedent that ,necessity, is not a defence against murder. See http:// www.justis.com/titles/ iclr-bqb14040.html [accessed 12 October 2008]. It is strangely appropriate that I - a person called Fudge - am a distant relative of Richard Parker (a fact I owe to my Auntie Doll and to my cousin Ian Hunter,s genealogical research)
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25
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1142288588
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Edinburgh: Canongate and 36
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Yann Martel, Life of Pi (Edinburgh: Canongate, 2002), pp. 31 and 36
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(2002)
Life of Pi
, pp. 31
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Martel, Y.1
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27
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77950122326
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Martel
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Martel, Life of Pi, pp. 273-274
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Life of Pi
, pp. 273-274
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28
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1142288588
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224-225
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Martel, Life of Pi, pp. 213 and 224-225
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Life of Pi
, pp. 213
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Martel1
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30
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60950635898
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Saying nothing concerning the same: On dominion, purity, and meat in early modern England
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Fudge (ed.), (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press)
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See also Erica Fudge, ,Saying Nothing Concerning the Same: On Dominion, Purity, and Meat in Early Modern England" in Fudge (ed.), Renaissance Beasts: Of Animals, Humans, and Other Wonderful Creatures (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2004), pp. 79-80
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(2004)
Renaissance Beasts: Of Animals, Humans, and Other Wonderful Creatures
, pp. 79-80
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Fudge, E.1
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31
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77950116837
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Indeed, Elaine Showalter has argued that the cannibalism in Heart of Darkness - as in, Showalter, ,The Apocalyptic Fables of H.G. Wells" in John Stokes (ed.), Fin de Siècle/Fin du Globe: Fears and Fantasies of the Late Nineteenth Century (New York: St Martin,s Press
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Indeed, Elaine Showalter has argued that the cannibalism in Heart of Darkness - as in H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895) and The Island of Doctor Moreau (1896) - signifies ,the final breakdown of civilised ethics., Showalter, ,The Apocalyptic Fables of H.G. Wells" in John Stokes (ed.), Fin de Siècle/Fin du Globe: Fears and Fantasies of the Late Nineteenth Century (New York: St Martin,s Press, 1992), p. 70
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(1992)
The Time Machine (1895) and the Island of Doctor Moreau (1896) - Signifies ,the Final Breakdown of Civilised Ethics
, pp. 70
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Wells, H.G.1
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33
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79957078428
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On the role of the books in Tarzan
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On the role of the books in Tarzan see Jeff Berglund, ,Write, Right, White, Rite: Literacy, Imperialism, Race and Cannibalism in Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan of the Apes" Studies in American Fiction, 27.1 (1999), pp. 53-76
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(1999)
Studies in American Fiction
, vol.271
, pp. 53-76
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Berglund, J.1
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34
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Burroughs. Burroughs does not stop to consider how Tarzan knows how to transcribe the sound of his ape name into written language, something that would be impossible if - as is suggested - Tarzan writes and reads but does not have speech, and therefore does not know what letters and words sound like
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Burroughs, Tarzan, p. 115. Burroughs does not stop to consider how Tarzan knows how to transcribe the sound of his ape name into written language, something that would be impossible if - as is suggested - Tarzan writes and reads but does not have speech, and therefore does not know what letters and words sound like
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Tarzan
, pp. 115
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35
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0003806920
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revised ed. (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press)
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See, for example, Donald Griffin, Animal Minds: Beyond CognitiontoConscious-ness, revised ed. (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2001), pp. 14-17
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(2001)
Animal Minds: Beyond CognitiontoConscious-ness
, pp. 14-17
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Griffin, D.1
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36
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Mass civilisation and minority culture
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Quoted in, (London: Chatto and Windus)
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Quoted in F.R. Leavis, ,Mass Civilisation and Minority Culture" in Leavis, Education and the University: A Sketch for an ,English School, (London: Chatto and Windus, 1965), p. 150
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(1965)
Leavis, Education and the University: A Sketch for An ,English School
, pp. 150
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Leavis, F.R.1
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37
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80054713623
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Tarzan, lord of the suburbs
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The racism of Tarzan is reflected in Burroughs, life: using the money he made from sales of his Tarzan novels, in the 1920s he bought up land in southern California ,which he later subdivided and marketed exclusively to white homeowners,. The town is called Tarzana
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The racism of Tarzan is reflected in Burroughs, life: using the money he made from sales of his Tarzan novels, in the 1920s he bought up land in southern California ,which he later subdivided and marketed exclusively to white homeowners,. The town is called Tarzana. Catherine Jurca, ,Tarzan, Lord of the Suburbs" Modern Language Quarterly 57.3 (1996), p. 489
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(1996)
Modern Language Quarterly
, vol.573
, pp. 489
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Jurca, C.1
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38
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79957394181
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Tarzan of the Apes is a ,paradigmatic tale of racial reca pitulation,. ,Wild child becomes savage boy becomes civilized man, who in due evolutionary turn outstrips even his own aristocratic forebears. for only by returning to racial origins, recapitulation theory argued, might one move the present race a step ahead., Gleason, ,Of Sequels and Sons: Tarzan and the Problem of Paternity
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For 41
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For William Gleason, Tarzan of the Apes is a ,paradigmatic tale of racial reca pitulation,. ,Wild child becomes savage boy becomes civilized man, who in due evolutionary turn outstrips even his own aristocratic forebears. For only by returning to racial origins, recapitulation theory argued, might one move the present race a step ahead., Gleason, ,Of Sequels and Sons: Tarzan and the Problem of Paternity" Journal of American and Comparative Cultures, 23.1 (2000), pp. 42 and 41
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(2000)
Journal of American and Comparative Cultures
, vol.231
, pp. 42
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Gleason, W.1
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39
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79957314024
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translated by Jasper Heywood (1560), ed. Joost Daalder (London: Ernest Benn)
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Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Thyestes, translated by Jasper Heywood (1560), ed. Joost Daalder (London: Ernest Benn, 1982)
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(1982)
Thyestes
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Annaeus Seneca, L.1
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40
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0009610389
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Cited in (London: Reaktion)
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Cited in Steve Baker, The Postmodern Animal (London: Reaktion, 2000), p. 86
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(2000)
The Postmodern Animal
, pp. 86
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Baker, S.1
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41
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71049175117
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Pigs, people and pigoons
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Greenaway regarded the cannibalism as literal and metaphorical: ,in the consumer society, once we have stuffed the whole world into our mouths, ultimately we will end up eating ourselves,. Greenaway cited in Helen Tiffin, ,Pigs, People and Pigoons, in Laurence Simmons and Philip Armstrong (ed.), Knowing Animals (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2007), p. 248
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(2007)
Knowing Animals
, pp. 248
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Tiffin, H.1
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42
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Dis/integrating animals: Ethical dimensions of the genetic engineering of animals for human consumption
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[accessed 30 September 2008]. I am grateful to Susan McHugh for pointing this website out to me and allowing me to read her unpublished work on meat production. Similar developments - in fact and fiction - are discussed in, (January 2006), pp. 82-102, especially pp. 97-99
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http:// www.new-harvest.org/default.php [accessed 30 September 2008]. I am grateful to Susan McHugh for pointing this website out to me and allowing me to read her unpublished work on meat production. Similar developments - in fact and fiction - are discussed in Traci Warkentin, ,Dis/integrating animals: ethical dimensions of the genetic engineering of animals for human consumption" AI & Society: The Journal of Human-Centred Systems 20:1 (January 2006), pp. 82-102, especially pp. 97-99
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AI & Society: The Journal of Human-Centred Systems
, vol.20
, pp. 1
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Warkentin, T.1
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43
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The novel discussed by Warkentin in this context is Margaret Atwood,s Oryx and Crake (2003) which is also discussed by Tiffin
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The novel discussed by Warkentin in this context is Margaret Atwood,s Oryx and Crake (2003) which is also discussed by Tiffin: ,Pigs, People and Pigoons" pp. 258-260
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Pigs, People and Pigoons
, pp. 258-260
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[accessed 30 September 2008]
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See http://www.peta.org/mc/NewsItem.asp?id=11306 [accessed 30 September 2008]
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Marie-Louise Mallet (ed.) translated by David Wills (New York: Fordham University Press), passim
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See Jacques Derrida, The Animal That Therefore I Am, Marie-Louise Mallet (ed.), translated by David Wills (New York: Fordham University Press, 2008), passim
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(2008)
The Animal That Therefore i Am
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Derrida, J.1
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46
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Derrida
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Derrida, ,Eating Well" pp. 112-113
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Eating Well
, pp. 112-113
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