“Challenging us to discover, create, and practice modes of literacy that depart from the conventional paths that have disciplined us, Nathan Snaza puts forth significant and bracing provocations about the relationship between reading and the production of Man. In his brilliant formulation, literacy is no longer exclusively human-it happens within a thick web of animating entities that affect and bewilder. An outstanding work.” - Stacy Alaimo, author of (Exposed: Environmental Politics and Pleasures in Posthuman Times) “Offering stimulating readings of familiar literary texts, Nathan Snaza recasts literacy within a field of material objects and conditions by weaving new materialism together with postcolonial and posthumanist thought into meditations on literacies within and beyond the human.” - Carla Freccero, author of (Queer/Early/Modern) "Dovetailing feminist and queer new materialism, posthumanism, affect theory, ecocriticism, and a touch of Marx and Foucault, <i>Animate Literacies</i> demands a lot of its reader, though it almost always, rewards strenuous attention with its rich and energizing combination of love and critique." - Margaret Mendenhall (Ethnic and Third World Literatures) <p>“This book is delightfully peripatetic, crisscrossing critical fields and literary texts with acuity and grace. Pulled into these movements, we become 'reading things' that cannot but feel the very bewilderment so key to building alternate futures.”</p> - Erica Fretwell (Studies in the Novel) "Snaza’s book provides a rich ensemble of literary accounts that illustrate his expanded notion of literacy. . . . <i>Animate Literacies</i> is a demonstration of both the vitality and the crisis of the humanities, sitting at a point where different roads cross, as it simultaneously takes on a speculative and a critical approach to the concept of literacy." - Ana Marques (Expanded Literacies) "[<i>Animate Literacies</i>] can help us to imagine our way out of the colonial structures that order academic libraries and librarianship." - Melissa Adler (College and Research Libraries)
1. The Human(ities) In Crisis 1
2. Beloved's Dispersed Pedagogy 11
3. Haunting, Love, and Attention 19
4. Humanizing Assemblages I: What Is Man? 28
5. Slavery, the Human, and Dehumanization 38
6. Literacy, Slavery, and the Education of Desire 48
7. What Is Literacy? 55
8. Humanizing Assemblages II: Discipline and Control 66
9. Bewilderment 77
10. Toward a Literary Ethology 86
11. What Happens When I Read? 99
12. The Smell of Literature 115
13. Pleasures of the Text 124
14. Those Changeful Sites 134
15. Literacies against the State 145
16. Futures of Anima-Literature 153
Notes 165
References 193
Index 209