Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/14171
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dc.contributor.authorMcDonell, Jenniferen
local.source.editorEditor(s): Jessica Gildersleeveen
dc.date.accessioned2014-03-07T10:39:00Z-
dc.date.issued2013-
dc.identifier.citationVictorian Vocabularies: Refereed Proceedings of the 2012 Australasian Victorian Studies Association Conference, p. 111-131en
dc.identifier.isbn9780987161123en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/14171-
dc.description.abstractIn recent decades literary historians, particularly in the field of American studies, have argued that sentimental texts are atypically self-conscious about their ambition to radically reconceive civil relationships and collective obligations by disclosing the voices and interests of marginalized social subjects (Menely 246; Tompkins xi; see also Dillon 495-523, as well as extended discussions in Cohen and Berlant). This argument can be extended by examining several situated accounts of the way in which the expression, analysis and experience of intense attachment, love, gratitude, disappointment, grief and despair over the loss of pet dogs reinforces and disrupts the cultural work attributed to sentimentality and sentimental texts. The writings of Jane Carlyle, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Michael Field suggest that the loss of pet animals was a profoundly conflicting experience for the authors. Yet these experiences were not only routinely dismissed by their contemporaries as sentimental, but were also perceived to be a threat to 'legitimate' emotional, ethical, and political attachments, that is to say, to family, God and other human animals. While it is commonplace to dismiss loving animals, especially pets, as inherently sentimental, this essay is premised on the argument that in this era of the Anthropocene the question of grieving for animal deaths is a political act because, as Judith Butler points out, it is about which lives get to count as life. Butler's recent work has insisted that questions about who is entitled to mourn, and who is mournable, are at the heart of social intelligibility. To deny the right to mourn, or to make a human unmournable, is to deny them social tangibility. Butler's argument is that disavowing the life of another and being unable to mourn always disavows the life as such - it does not just cede the one you care for into social unintelligibility, but also cedes part of yourself into the same social unintelligibility (Stanescu 568). This important insight can be brought to bear on animal lives and the way in which an uncritical discourse of sentimentality has functioned to disavow mourning for animals: the beloved pet, a subject deemed to lead a trivial life, is definitionally considered less mournable than that of a human animal.en
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherMacquarie Lighthouse E-book Publishingen
dc.relation.ispartofVictorian Vocabularies: Refereed Proceedings of the 2012 Australasian Victorian Studies Association Conferenceen
dc.relation.isversionof1en
dc.title'This You'll Call Sentimental, Perhaps': Animal Death and the Propriety of Mourningen
dc.typeBook Chapteren
dc.subject.keywordsBritish and Irish Literatureen
local.contributor.firstnameJenniferen
local.subject.for2008200503 British and Irish Literatureen
local.subject.seo2008970120 Expanding Knowledge in Language, Communication and Cultureen
local.subject.seo2008950407 Social Ethicsen
local.subject.seo2008950504 Understanding Europes Pasten
local.identifier.epublicationsvtls086678389en
local.profile.schoolSchool of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciencesen
local.profile.emailjmcdonel@une.edu.auen
local.output.categoryB1en
local.record.placeauen
local.record.institutionUniversity of New Englanden
local.identifier.epublicationsrecordune-20140130-165845en
local.publisher.placeSydney, Australiaen
local.identifier.totalchapters14en
local.format.startpage111en
local.format.endpage131en
local.title.subtitleAnimal Death and the Propriety of Mourningen
local.contributor.lastnameMcDonellen
dc.identifier.staffune-id:jmcdonelen
local.profile.orcid0000-0002-5338-8577en
local.profile.roleauthoren
local.identifier.unepublicationidune:14384en
dc.identifier.academiclevelAcademicen
local.title.maintitle'This You'll Call Sentimental, Perhaps'en
local.output.categorydescriptionB1 Chapter in a Scholarly Booken
local.relation.urlhttp://www.avsa.unimelb.edu.au/en
local.search.authorMcDonell, Jenniferen
local.uneassociationUnknownen
local.year.published2013en
local.subject.for2020470504 British and Irish literatureen
local.subject.seo2020130304 Social ethicsen
local.subject.seo2020130704 Understanding Europe’s pasten
local.subject.seo2020280114 Expanding knowledge in Indigenous studiesen
Appears in Collections:Book Chapter
School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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