TY - BOOK
T1 - Vivisection and late-Victorian literary culture
AU - Hornsby, Asha
N1 - Funding: Financial support from the Arts and Humanities Research Council has aided this book’s development, and a Visiting Research Fellowship at UCL’s Institute of Advanced Studies provided an intellectually stimulating environment and access to useful resources.
PY - 2025/2/6
Y1 - 2025/2/6
N2 - The nineteenth-century antivivisection movement was supported by a striking number of poets, authors, and playwrights who attended meetings, signed petitions, contributed funds, and lent their pens to the cause. Yet live animal experimentation also permeated the Victorian imagination and shaped British literary culture in ways that the movement against it did not anticipate and could not entirely control. This is the first sustained literary-critical study of the topic. It traces responses to the practice through an extensive corpus of canonical, popular, and ephemeral texts including newspapers, scientific books, and government documents. Asha Hornsby sheds light on the complex entanglement of art and science at the fin-de-siècle and explores how the representational and aesthetic preoccupations opened up by vivisection debates often sat uneasily alongside a socio-political commitment to animal protection. Despite efforts to present writing and vivisecting as rivalrous activities, author and experimenter, pen and scalpel, often resembled each other.
AB - The nineteenth-century antivivisection movement was supported by a striking number of poets, authors, and playwrights who attended meetings, signed petitions, contributed funds, and lent their pens to the cause. Yet live animal experimentation also permeated the Victorian imagination and shaped British literary culture in ways that the movement against it did not anticipate and could not entirely control. This is the first sustained literary-critical study of the topic. It traces responses to the practice through an extensive corpus of canonical, popular, and ephemeral texts including newspapers, scientific books, and government documents. Asha Hornsby sheds light on the complex entanglement of art and science at the fin-de-siècle and explores how the representational and aesthetic preoccupations opened up by vivisection debates often sat uneasily alongside a socio-political commitment to animal protection. Despite efforts to present writing and vivisecting as rivalrous activities, author and experimenter, pen and scalpel, often resembled each other.
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/gb/universitypress/subjects/literature/english-literature-1830-1900/vivisection-and-late-victorian-literary-culture?format=HB
UR - https://discover.libraryhub.jisc.ac.uk/search?q=isn%3A%209781009503525&rn=1
U2 - 10.1017/9781009503532
DO - 10.1017/9781009503532
M3 - Book
SN - 9781009503525
SN - 9781009503549
T3 - Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture
BT - Vivisection and late-Victorian literary culture
PB - Cambridge University Press
CY - Cambridge
ER -