![]() In juxtaposing often unexpected but illuminating examples, new questions emerge. Typical of Bourke's approach, previously seen in her books on Rape, Fear and Dismembering the Male, this book covers an impressive range of material, situating it in a broad cultural historical framework. The Earnest Englishwoman audaciously argued for women to be treated at least as favourably as animals. Bourke takes as her starting point an argument for women's rights expressed in a letter from ‘An Earnest Englishwoman’ (1872) using a comparison between the treatment of animals and women. ![]() The three graces in Rubens’ painting appear in a collage: women above the waist and animal below. The book cover image harks back to the seventeenth century, foregrounding the human (specifically female)-animal categories. ![]() ‘What it means to be human’ is becoming increasingly uncertain in ways unimaginable at the beginning of the twentieth century. 16) and how definitions of the human have tended to deploy the language of rights in distinguishing the human from the animal. This book is concerned particularly with ‘the unknowability of all animals’ (p. ![]() In the face of rapid technological change, human identity is becoming increasingly uncertain. ![]() Joanna Bourke's new book engages with one of the most urgent questions facing contemporary culture. ![]()
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