This book surveys a broad range of contemporary texts to show how
representations of human-animal relations challenge the anthropocentric
nature of fiction. By looking at the relation between language and
suffering in twenty-first-century fiction and drawing on a wide range of
theoretical approaches, Baker suggests new opportunities for exploring
the centrality of nonhuman animals in recent fiction: writing animal
lives leads to new narrative structures and forms of expression. These
novels destabilise assumptions about the nature of pain and
vulnerability, the burden of literary inheritance, the challenge of
writing the Anthropocene, and the relation between text and image.
Including both well-known authors and emerging talents, from J.M.
Coetzee and Karen Joy Fowler to Sarah Hall, Alexis Wright, and Max
Porter, and texts from experimental fiction to work for children,
Writing Animals offers an original perspective on both contemporary
fiction and the field of literary animal studies.