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David Perkins, Romanticism and Animal Rights.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Cambridge Studies in
Romanticism, no. 58. xvi + 210pp. $95.00 (Hdbk; ISBN-10: 0-521-82941-0;
ISBN-13: 978-0-521-82941-0); $37.99 (Pbk.; ISBN-13: 978-0-521-04598-8).
Christine Kenyon-Jones, Kindred Brutes: Animals
in Romantic-Period Writing. Aldershot, England: Ashgate Publishing,
2001. The Nineteenth-Century Series. viii + 229pp; illus. (10 halftones).
$99.95. (Hdbk: ISBN: 0-7546-0332-6).
Bibliographic Citation: Schwartz, Janelle
A. "On David Perkins, Romanticism and Animal Rights; and Christine
Kenyon-Jones, Kindred Brutes: Animals in Romantic-Period Writing."
[date of access]. Romantic Circles Reviews 10.1 (2008): 8 pars.
Apr. 2008. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/schwartz_sp08.html>.
Table of Contents
David Perkins, Romanticism and Animal Rights.
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. In the beginning of animal rights
2. Grounds of argument
3. Keeping pets: William Cowper and his hares
4. Barbarian pleasures: against hunting
5. Savage amusements of the poor: John Clare's badger sonnets
6. Work animals, slaves, servants: Coleridge's young ass
7. The slaughterhouse and the kitchen: Charles Lamb's "Dissertation
upon Roast Pig"
8. Caged birds and wild
Notes
Bibliographical essay
Index
Christine Kenyon-Jones, Kindred Brutes: Animals
in Romantic-Period Writing.
List of illustrations
General editor's preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: 'Animals are good to think with'
1. Animals Dead and Alive: Pets, Politics and Poetry in the Romantic Period
2. Children's Animals: Locke, Rousseau, Coleridge and the Instruction/Imagination
Debate
3. Political Animals: Bull-fighting, Bull-baiting and Childe Harold I
4. Animals as Food: Shelley, Byron and the Ideology of Eating
5. Animals and Nature: Beasts, Birds and Wordsworth's Ecological Credentials
6. Evolutionary Animals: Science and Imagination Between the Darwins
7. In Conclusion: Animals Then and Now
Bibliography
Index
Reviewed by
Janelle A. Schwartz
University of WisconsinMadison
-
In A Memoir of Thomas Bewick by Himself, we are told that
the Farmer (well-known to the 12-year-old Bewick), proposing to have
"a bit more sport" with a captured hare, broke "one
of its legs, and then again [set] the poor Animal off, a little before
the Dogs" (qtd. in RR 15). Thinking that the Farmer would
help to save the life of the hapless hare, the young Bewick gave the
animal into what he thought would be beneficent hands. To his surprise,
the Farmer's intervention served only to exacerbate the already brutal
scene of the fox hunt. This vignette encapsulates the key figures
and concepts in David Perkins' Romanticism and Animal Rights
and Christine Kenyon-Jones' Kindred Brutes: Animals in Romantic-Period
Writing; both texts present comprehensive, sustained studies of
how and why animals appeared in the literature of the Romantic era.
Seeking to draw attention to contemporary and modern ecological concerns,
both Perkins and Kenyon-Jones couch their arguments in the multitude
of discourses about animals in the eighteenth and early-nineteenth
centuries. Ranging from the didacticism of children's literature and
the practice of keeping pets to contemporary debates surrounding hunting
and vegetarianism, as well as parliamentary debates on the rights
of animals and the encyclopaedic texts produced on the subject, these
discourses not only highlight the presence of animals in English culture,
but they also demonstrate the inextricable link between animals and
humans. Romanticism and Animal Rights and Kindred Brutes,
therefore, reveal the essential, and often times varied, role of the
animal to aid in an understanding of the human.
-
In ways similar to Harriet Ritvo's provocative book, The Platypus
and the Mermaid, Perkins and Kenyon-Jones orient themselves within
"a large and complex society" in order to demonstrate how
"animals performed many different functions and stood (or flew
or swam) in relation to many different groups of people" (Ritvo
xii). Whereas Ritvo focuses her study around those exotic and aberrant
animals feverishly discovered and collected by Victorian society,
Perkins and Kenyon-Jones concentrate on the everyday animals that
were underfoot, under the gun, in the pasture, in the street, or on
the dinner plate of a slightly earlier era. Such animals readily represent
what Perkins deems the obvious subjects "in the campaign for
humanity to animals" (115), as well as what Kenyon-Jones states
is the "central place in any system which seeks to relate humans
to the natural environment" (141). As a result, both Romanticism
and Animal Rights and Kindred Brutes complicate accepted
approaches to animals and the natural environment by looking closely
at the poetry and prose written in and about the familiar setting
of eighteenth and early-nineteenth century life.
-
"When a child asks, 'What were flies made for?' her father replies,
'Suppose a fly capable of thinking, would he not be equally puzzled
to find out what men were good for?'" (qtd. in Perkins 6). According
to Perkins, this telling exchange between father and daughter, fly and
humanity, reveals a problematic, though perhaps necessary, closing of
the perspectival gap between human- and animal-kind. Asserting that
"sympathy might tend to deprive humans of special importance and
status among the creatures" (6), Perkins alerts us to three competing
modes of the argument surrounding animal rights during the second half
of the eighteenth century (which he develops at length in his second
chapter, "Grounds of argument"). On the one hand, animals
are distinct from humans. They are subordinated to humans through their
being thought of as property and, in turn, treated with brutality. On
the other hand, discussions of "animal rights" could allow
for the elision of just such a distinction. If animals are believed
to have natural rights, which would lead inevitably to legal rights,
then humankind loses its "special importance" in God's created
system of existence. In sympathy with animals, humans in turn reveal
their own misanthropy, and therefore emphasize the Romantic conception
of ideal nature against that of civilized society (Perkins 4). Meanwhile,
however, there were also those who rejected this leveling system on
the grounds that "the creatures themselves could not be inflamed
by such agitation" (Perkins 43). In other words, because animals
could not create the polemics of humans, they became the model
figures from which humans should learn moral rectitude.
-
With two introductory chapters, Perkins effectively contextualizes
his argument by describing the changes in attitude surrounding animals
that led up to the establishment of The Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals in 1824. This historical account grounds the
close readings that follow in the remaining six chapters within the
social, cultural and political issues at stake in the development
of animal rights. His straightforward and amusing prose serves up
insightful new perspectives on such old favorites as Cowper's The
Task and Coleridge's "To a Young Ass," while also presenting
inventive analyses on several texts outside the established, though
clearly unsettled, canon, including Clare's badger sonnets. Perkins'
revealing discussion of Clare ultimately functions to call attention
to the fact that "the animal is just a metaphor, with little
character or life of its own that the poet values" (147). Animals
did (and do) indeed suffer from "the usual, universal basis of
emotional reactions to animals; we react to what we have attributed"
(Perkins 9). In accordance with this type of anthropomorphism, Perkins'
close textual analyses are woven together with their historical and
biographical significances so that Romanticism and Animal Rights
consistently uncovers the strength of the poetic voice—albeit
a voice with multiple, oftentimes dissenting perspectives—to
reflect and to influence public opinion. And although there is some
repetition of the historical and biographical information from chapter
to chapter, this repetition helps to emphasize the fluctuating perspectives
between the individual works of Romantic poetry.
-
Proposing a look at the "newly different" and "newly
similar" attributes of animals in Romantic-period writing, Kenyon-Jones
approaches her topic by casting a wide net. As a dense, carefully-researched
catalogue of animals, Kindred Brutes combines non-literary
discourses with the literary in order to explicate not only the issue
of animal rights, but questions of gender and the body, of consumption,
of friendship and liberty, and of zoology, ecology and variable conceptions
of Nature. Moving back and forth between Bacon and Byron, Descartes
and Darwin, Montaigne and Malthus, Pliny and Pope, and so on, Kenyon-Jones
accounts for the prodigious numbers of animal references found before,
within and after the Romantic era.
- Kindred
Brutes begins
with a discussion of
the living sentiment
given to one's own deceased
pet—Byron's "Inscription
on the Monument of a
Newfoundland Dog." In
Chapter One, "Animals
Dead and Alive: Pets,
Politics and Poetry
in the Romantic Period," Kenyon-Jones
presents a kind of literature
review threaded through
with her reading of
Byron's "Inscription." As
a testament to the theriophilic
tradition, this inscription
is said to locate discussions
of the animal simultaneously
inside and outside those
of the human, and within
and without life itself.
Thus, the "Inscription" gives
to Byron's dog, Boatswain,
the ability "to
remind us of our kinship
[to it]" while
also providing a contrast
between "human
folly" and "animals'
instinctive wisdom" (Kenyon-Jones
12). Here, as happens
later within Perkins'
text, Kenyon-Jones immediately
subverts the idea that
animals are inferior
to humans—through
satire and slight irony—and
so gives to the animals
the didactic power needed
to effectively transform
human perception not
only towards animals,
but towards fellow human
beings as well. There
is a strong link, claims
Kenyon-Jones, between
the "lower" ranks
of humankind, such as
slaves, women, and other
oppressed groups, and
the status of the animal
(205). Thus, while it
was during the Romantic
period that modern discussions
of kindness towards
animals for animals'
sake began to replace
the human-centered use
of animals, an appeal
for a sympathetic humanity
towards itself also
began to take root.
Here both Perkins and
Kenyon-Jones agree that
representations of the
animal call for egalitarian
practices from human
to human. Both authors
fall prey themselves,
therefore, to the Romantic "turning
inward," which
allows that the animal
might be but the reflector
needed to reveal ourselves
to ourselves. The animal
becomes yet another
instrument with which
to gain an understanding
of the Romantic subject.
-
While Kindred
Brutes provides
an important, source-oriented
foundation for the
burgeoning scholarship
on animals in Romanticism,
its insistence on
variety and scope
limits Kenyon-Jones'
critical engagement
with her chosen texts.
Her meticulously contextualized
discussions of key
works stop just short
of the detailed analyses
that appear in Perkins'
text. Instead, Kenyon-Jones
continually draws
our attention to the
works of Coleridge,
Wordsworth, Shelley
and (particularly)
Byron in an attempt
to formulate a locus
around which all of
her other sources
can orient. And while
she successfully illustrates
a vast field of textual
examples with which
to approach animals
in Romantic (as well
as in some Victorian)
writing, her consistent
return to the above-mentioned
authors makes the
text itself appear
anxious about this
claimed focus, rather
than comfortable with
its potentially more
revealing wanderings.
- Similar
to Perkins' claim for
the erasure of the actual
animal in favor of its
figurative strength, Kenyon-Jones
maintains that "in
a metaphorical, spiritual
or feeling-based form
. . . human/animal kinship" lends
itself to "much
current thinking about
human behavior," but
her concession that this
perception "adds
greatly to the value placed
on all animals" is
an important inversion
left out of Perkins' text
(206). Romanticism
and Animal Rights curiously
evades the implication
of a heightened animal
value that might arise
from a strong kinship
between animals and humans.
Although Perkins does
articulate the idea that
the exploitation of animals
occurs beyond the immediacy
of their use (or abuse),
and in the continued displacement
by "whatever
social group animals and
their treatment are said
to figure" (xi),
he does not explore fully
the ramifications of this
idea. He chooses, ironically,
to remain largely focused
on the human. Kenyon-Jones,
however, moves her argument
beyond this trap of animal
subordination. Kindred
Brutes concludes
with a brief chapter ("Animals
Then and Now")
that claims for the twenty-first
century's conceptions
of the animal a founding
ancestor in the Romantic
era. While this connection
between yesterday and
today clearly resonates
with current environmental
discourse, it is a connection
that nevertheless distracts
the reader from Kenyon-Jones'
significant compilation
of "kindred
brutes." Romanticism
and Animal Rights and Kindred
Brutes focus
on sentiments towards,
as well as the plight
and use of, animals at
a time when the rights
of animals were hotly
debated and when humankind
was desperately trying
to decipher (i.e.,
to distinguish) its own
significance within the
Chain of Being. Both texts
mark a cultural turning-point,
or at least a crucial
point of departure, in
the consideration of animals
and their place in human
society and thought—thus
making clear that animals
truly are "'good
to think with.'"
Perkins: Publisher's
Information
Kenyon-Jones: Publisher's
Information
Review published: 20 April 2008.
Romantic
Circles - Reviews -
David Perkins, Romanticism
and Animal Rights;
and Christine Kenyon-Jones, Kindred
Brutes: Animals in Romantic-Period
Writing.
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