![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In this meticulously researched, wide-ranging and illuminating book, Joanna Bourke explores the legacy of more than two centuries, and looks forward to what the future might hold for humans and animals. If she had been capable of looking 100 years into the future, she might have wondered about chimeras, created by transplanting animal fluids and organs into human bodies, or the ethics of stem cell research. In her time and beyond, the debate around human status involved questions of language, facial physiology, and vegetarianism. Through a unique combination of critical, posthumanist, and educational theories, the authors engage in a surreal journey into how social movements are. What does it mean to be 'human' rather than 'animal'? If the Ernest Englishwoman had turned her gaze to the previous century, her critique could equally have applied to slaves. In reality, their status was worse than that of animals: regulations prohibiting cruelty against dogs, horses and cattle were significantly more punitive than laws against cruelty to women. Bourke looks at the changing meanings of bestiality and zoophilia. ![]() Click here to purchase from Rakuten Kobo In 1872, a woman known only as 'An Ernest Englishwoman' published an open letter entitled 'Are women animals?', in which she protested the fact that women were not treated as fully human. Erasing the awe-inspiring variety of sentient life impoverishes all our lives, historian Joanna Bourke wrote in her poignant meditation on what it means. In this book the renowned historian Joanna Bourke explores the modern history of sex between humans and animals. ![]()
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