List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction Concepts
Joseph Campana
1.Sting Stinging like a Bee in Early Modern England
Julian Yates
2. Scale Lesser Living in the Renaissance
Joseph Campana
3. Pest Environmental Justice and the (Early Modern) Rhetoric of Pest Control
Jennifer Munroe and Rebecca Laroche
4. Infestation Out of Africa: Locust Infestation, Universal History, and the Early Modern Theological Imaginary
Lucinda Cole
5. Habitat and Politics “Regardles of his gouernaunce”: Exploring Human Sovereignty and Political Formation in Early Modern Insect Habitats
Andrew Fleck
6. Consume Consuming Insects
Amy L. Tigner
7. Decompose Worm Work
Frances E. Dolan
8. Locomotion Creeping and Crawling
Keith Botelho
9. Communication Tettix
Lowell Duckert
10. Swarm Song of the Swarm
Derek Woods
11. Illumination “Living Lamps”
Jessica Lynn Wolfe
Epilogue Concepts
Keith Botelho
List of Contributors
Index
Keith Botelho is Professor of English at Kennesaw State University. He is the author of Renaissance Earwitnesses: Rumor and Early Modern Masculinity.
Joseph Campana is William Shakespeare Professor of English and Director of the Center for Environmental Studies at Rice University. He is the author of The Pain of Reformation: Spenser, Vulnerability, and the Ethics of Masculinity and the coeditor, with Scott Maisano, of Renaissance Posthumanism.
“This is a superb and richly varied collection that does justice to
the dazzling variety of entomological writing in the Renaissance. .
. . Lesser Living Creatures of the Renaissance makes a significant
contribution to animal studies, the environmental humanities and
the history of science, particularly in its attention to scale and
the ways that literary insects both underwrote and pressured the
centrality of analogy as the episteme of pre-Enlightenment natural
history.”—Todd Andrew Borlik Renaissance Studies
“Lesser Living Creatures of the Renaissance brings a welcome and
timely focus on early modern understandings of insect life, ideas,
and work that stood, as the authors convincingly argue, in the
midst of the transformation of natural history ‘as literary
authority’ to embodying the new scientific ideas and observational
methods of the era. This two-volume work makes a significant
scholarly contribution to literary studies and history by bringing
insects and insect life into these conversations.”—Martha Few,
author of Baptism Through Incision: The Postmortem Cesarean
Operation in the Spanish Empire
“There has not previously been such a wide-ranging collection as
this. Lesser Living Creatures of the Renaissance is a vital new
contribution to not only early modern studies, not only animal
studies and ecocriticism, but also to the history of science, the
history of medicine, and current debates about the
environment.”—Erica Fudge, author of Quick Cattle and Dying Wishes:
People and their Animals in Early Modern England
Ask a Question About this Product More... |