Found in Narration: Nonhuman Voices in Jessica Grant’s "Come, Thou Tortoise" and Colin McAdam’s "A Beautiful Truth"
Found in Narration: Nonhuman Voices in Jessica Grant’s "Come, Thou Tortoise" and Colin McAdam’s "A Beautiful Truth"
Author(s): Magdalena JagodzkaSubject(s): Fiction, Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Aesthetics, Semantics, Comparative Study of Literature, Other Language Literature, Theory of Literature, Rhetoric
Published by: Universitatea Petrol-Gaze din Ploieşti
Keywords: nonhuman; nonhuman narrator; nonhuman narrative; Jessica Grant; Colin McAdam; tortoise; chimpanzee; Looee;
Summary/Abstract: This article delves into the problem of nonhuman subjectivity in two literary texts: Jessica Grant’s Come, Thou Tortoise with the first-person tortoise narration, and Colin McAdam’s A Beautiful Truth that employs the collective primate narrator. While nonhumans cannot actively participate in the act of creation of the text, their presence in the story, arranged by the author, conveys multiple meanings. Considerations of the narrative techniques are critical for negotiating the relevance of nonhuman actors. I argue that although each author finds different methods of giving voice to nonhumans and both ensure practical significance of animal particularity, nonhuman subjectivity should not be perceived as a fixed value of the presented literary texts.
Journal: Word and Text, A Journal of Literary Studies and Linguistics
- Issue Year: XI/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 159-174
- Page Count: 16
- Language: English