Lesser Living Creatures of the Renaissance

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allegory
ant
bee
bees
Ben Jonson
bioluminescence
biopolitics
bug
butterfly
Category=NHD
charisma
cicada
compost
consumption
creature
creeping
disease
earthworm
ecocriticism
ecofeminism
ecology
Edmund Spenser
entomology
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
flea
gnat
grasshopper
habitat
hornet
insect
John Donne
locomotion
locust
maggots
moth
narrative
natural history
noise
observation
pest
recipes
reproduction
scale
scorpion
sexuality
silkworm
sovereignty
spider
sting
swarm
Thomas Moffett
voice
wasps
water bug
William Shakespeare
worm

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271094496
  • Weight: 367g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2025
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Lesser Living Creatures examines literary and cultural texts from early modern England in order to understand how people in that era thought about—and with—insect and arachnid life. The conversations in this two-volume set address the collaborative, multigenerational research that produced early modern natural history and provide new insights into the old question of what it means to be human in a world populated by beasts large and small.

Volume 2, Concepts, explores ideas that cut across species, insect and otherwise, both building on and invigorating critical vocabularies developed over nearly two decades of early modern animal studies. The contributors explore topics such as the medical and culinary consumption of insects; extermination campaigns; the auditory and emotive effects of a swarm; insects and politics; and notions of infestation, stinging, and creeping. Throughout, they illuminate how early modern science and literature worked as intersecting systems of knowledge production about the natural world and show definitively how insect life was, and remains, intimately entangled with human life.

In addition to the editors, contributors to this volume include Lucinda Cole, Frances E. Dolan, Lowell Duckert, Andrew Fleck, Rebecca Laroche, Jennifer Munroe, Amy L. Tigner, Jessica Lynn Wolfe, Derek Woods, and Julian Yates.

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.