The idea of human cruelty to animals so consumes novelist Elizabeth
Costello in her later years that she can no longer look another person
in the eye: humans, especially meat-eating ones, seem to her to be
conspirators in a crime of stupefying magnitude taking place on farms
and in slaughterhouses, factories, and laboratories across the world.
Costello's son, a physics professor, admires her literary
achievements, but dreads his mother’s lecturing on animal rights at
the college where he teaches. His colleagues resist her argument that
human reason is overrated and that the inability to reason does not
diminish the value of life; his wife denounces his mother’s
vegetarianism as a form of moral superiority. At the dinner that
follows her first lecture, the guests confront Costello with a range
of sympathetic and skeptical reactions to issues of animal rights,
touching on broad philosophical, anthropological, and religious
perspectives. Painfully for her son, Elizabeth Costello seems
offensive and flaky, but—dare he admit it?—strangely on target. In
this landmark book, Nobel Prize–winning writer J. M. Coetzee uses
fiction to present a powerfully moving discussion of animal rights in
all their complexity. He draws us into Elizabeth Costello’s own
sense of mortality, her compassion for animals, and her alienation
from humans, even from her own family. In his fable, presented as a
Tanner Lecture sponsored by the University Center for Human Values at
Princeton University, Coetzee immerses us in a drama reflecting the
real-life situation at hand: a writer delivering a lecture on an
emotionally charged issue at a prestigious university. Literature,
philosophy, performance, and deep human conviction—Coetzee brings
all these elements into play. As in the story of Elizabeth Costello,
the Tanner Lecture is followed by responses treating the reader to a
variety of perspectives, delivered by leading thinkers in different
fields. Coetzee’s text is accompanied by an introduction by
political philosopher Amy Gutmann and responsive essays by religion
scholar Wendy Doniger, primatologist Barbara Smuts, literary theorist
Marjorie Garber, and moral philosopher Peter Singer, author of Animal
Liberation. Together the lecture-fable and the essays explore the
palpable social consequences of uncompromising moral conflict and
confrontation.
Les mer
The Lives of Animals [Princeton Classics]
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400883523
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter