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3 Veganism, Utopia, and Science Fiction
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Joshua Bulleid
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Introduction 1
- Annotated Bibliography 16
- 1 Veganism and Women’s Writing 41
- 2 Veganism and Modernism 62
- 3 Veganism, Utopia, and Science Fiction 77
- 4 Veganism and Animals 93
- 5 Veganism and Race “Me luv life”: Benjamin Zephaniah’s Poetic Solidarities 107
- 6 Veganism, Gender, and Queerness: Exploring Trans-Veganism through Jeanette Winterson’s Frankissstein 122
- 7 Veganism and Postcolonialism: Dogs without Masters: Astray with Akbar and in André Alexis’s Fifteen Dogs 138
- 8 Veganism and the Monstrous “Not text, but texture”: Pale Fire and Monstrous Vegan Literary Criticism 152
- 9 Veganism and Disordered Eating: The “Planned Cow” and “No end to Meat”: Veganism and Disordered Eating 167
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Part II Genres and Forms
- 10 Prose. Dreaming Vegan: Han Kang’s The Vegetarian 185
- 11 Poetry 193
- 12 The Graphic Novel: Understanding Comics in a Crisis of Entanglement 203
- 13 Adaptation: No one mourns the Wicked, but we should 212
- 14 The Philosophical Essay 222
- 15 The Exposé. Through a Vegan Lens: The Challenges and Ethics of Exposé 231
- 16 Realism 241
- 17 The Memoir. Black Female Vegans on Decolonizing the Body and Mind: A. Breeze Harper’s Sistah Vegan Project 250
- 18 Young Adult Fiction 259
- 19 Satire. The (Im)possibilities of Vegan Satire 267
- 20 Utopian Fiction 278
- 21 Speculative Fiction: Vegan Cannibals from Outer Space: Octavia Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy 287
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Part III Textual Histories and Contexts
- 22 Ancient Scripture: Ancient Sacred Writings and Anymal Liberation 301
- 23 Long Nineteenth Century Ephemera 317
- 24 Society Writings 333
- 25 Modern Literary Production: Veganism and the Contemporary Book Industry 349
- Notes on Contributors 365
- Index 370
- Plate 377
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Introduction 1
- Annotated Bibliography 16
- 1 Veganism and Women’s Writing 41
- 2 Veganism and Modernism 62
- 3 Veganism, Utopia, and Science Fiction 77
- 4 Veganism and Animals 93
- 5 Veganism and Race “Me luv life”: Benjamin Zephaniah’s Poetic Solidarities 107
- 6 Veganism, Gender, and Queerness: Exploring Trans-Veganism through Jeanette Winterson’s Frankissstein 122
- 7 Veganism and Postcolonialism: Dogs without Masters: Astray with Akbar and in André Alexis’s Fifteen Dogs 138
- 8 Veganism and the Monstrous “Not text, but texture”: Pale Fire and Monstrous Vegan Literary Criticism 152
- 9 Veganism and Disordered Eating: The “Planned Cow” and “No end to Meat”: Veganism and Disordered Eating 167
-
Part II Genres and Forms
- 10 Prose. Dreaming Vegan: Han Kang’s The Vegetarian 185
- 11 Poetry 193
- 12 The Graphic Novel: Understanding Comics in a Crisis of Entanglement 203
- 13 Adaptation: No one mourns the Wicked, but we should 212
- 14 The Philosophical Essay 222
- 15 The Exposé. Through a Vegan Lens: The Challenges and Ethics of Exposé 231
- 16 Realism 241
- 17 The Memoir. Black Female Vegans on Decolonizing the Body and Mind: A. Breeze Harper’s Sistah Vegan Project 250
- 18 Young Adult Fiction 259
- 19 Satire. The (Im)possibilities of Vegan Satire 267
- 20 Utopian Fiction 278
- 21 Speculative Fiction: Vegan Cannibals from Outer Space: Octavia Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy 287
-
Part III Textual Histories and Contexts
- 22 Ancient Scripture: Ancient Sacred Writings and Anymal Liberation 301
- 23 Long Nineteenth Century Ephemera 317
- 24 Society Writings 333
- 25 Modern Literary Production: Veganism and the Contemporary Book Industry 349
- Notes on Contributors 365
- Index 370
- Plate 377