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Dominic Pettman - Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human (Posthumanities) - 9781517901219 - V9781517901219
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Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human (Posthumanities)

€ 33.99
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Description for Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human (Posthumanities) Paperback. Series: Posthumanities. Num Pages: 200 pages. BIC Classification: HP. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 139 x 215 x 25. .
To our modern ears the word creature has wild, musky, even monstrous, connotations. And yet the terms creaturely and love, taken together, have traditionally been associated with theological debates around the enigmatic affection between God and His key creation, Man. In Creaturely Love, Dominic Pettman explores the ways in which desire makes us both more, and less, human. In an eminently approachable work of wide cultural reach and meticulous scholarship, Pettman undertakes an unprecedented examination of how animals shape the understanding and expression of love between people. Focusing on key figures in modern philosophy, art, and literature (Nietzsche, Salome, Rilke, Balthus, Musil, Proust), premodern texts and fairy tales (Fourier, Fournival, Ovid), and contemporary films and online phenomena (Wendy and Lucy, Her, memes), Pettman demonstrates that from pet names to spirit animals, and allegories to analogies, animals have constantly appeared in our writings and thoughts about passionate desire. By following certain charismatic animals during their passage through the love letters of philosophers, the romances of novelists, the conceits of fables, the epiphanies of poets, the paradoxes of contemporary films, and the digital menageries of the Internet, Creaturely Love ultimately argues that in our utilization of the animal in our amorous expression, we are acknowledging that what we adore in our beloveds is not (only) their humanity, but their creatureliness.

Product Details

Publisher
Univ Of Minnesota Press
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2017
Series
Posthumanities
Condition
New
Weight
28g
Number of Pages
200
Place of Publication
Minnesota, United States
ISBN
9781517901219
SKU
V9781517901219
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 7 to 11 working days
Ref
99-1

About Dominic Pettman
Dominic Pettman is professor of culture and media at Eugene Lang College and the New School for Social Research. His books include Infinite Distraction, Human Error: Species-Being and Media Machines (Minnesota, 2011), Look at the Bunny, Love and Other Technologies, and Sonic Intimacy.

Reviews for Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human (Posthumanities)
Bettman's ideas and readings will doubtless find application in future scholarship; his text makes readers eager to see all genres of cultural production in the new framework this exciting work provides. -The Goose The book offers an interesting engagement with the complexity of expressions of affection. -CHOICE connect Pettman has written yet another absorbing, witty, moving, and smart book about the question of human exceptionalism, this time in relation to desire and love, attending especially to literary and artistic works. The book makes a significant contribution particularly to a revisionist reading of modernist literary/artistic history with relation to the presence of the nonhuman animal, or the creaturely. -Carla Freccero, University of California, Santa Cruz Dominic Pettman writes thoughtful, light-fingered books on significant questions that are simultaneously timely and timeless. In Creaturely Love, he takes up the perennial awkwardness that haunts every effort to etherealize romance: the proximity of our loving bodies to the critter-creatures that rut and tread and mount and cover each other just outside our windows. Drawing on the newest (and some of the oldest) thinking about humans and animals, Pettman here recalls us to ourselves-by ruminating on just how hard it is to say what exactly that might mean. -D. Graham Burnett, Princeton University

Goodreads reviews for Creaturely Love: How Desire Makes Us More and Less Than Human (Posthumanities)


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