The Vegan Viewer in the Circum-Polar World; Or, J. H.
Wheldon’s The Diana and Chase in the Arctic (1857)
Jason Edwards
Trojan Horses
Tom Tyler
Contents
Vegan Cinema
Anat Pick
Part III Literature
Monstrous Vegan Narratives: Margaret Atwood’s
Hideous Progeny
Emelia Quinn
On Refusal
Benjamin Westwood
The Unpacking Plant: Gleaning the Lexicons of Lean Culture
Natalie Joelle
Part IV Definitions
Ethical Veganism as Protected Identity: Constructing
a Creed Under Human Rights Law
Allison Covey
A Vegan Form of Life
Robert McKay
Conclusion
Emelia Quinn and Benjamin Westwood
Index
Emelia Quinn is a DPhil candidate and Wolfson Foundation scholar in the Faculty of English Literature and Language at the University of Oxford, UK. Her thesis establishes a transhistorical and transnational trajectory of literary veganisms, from the early nineteenth century to the present. She has previously published in The Journal of Commonwealth Literature and Society & Animals, with research interests across veganism, animal studies, and queer theory.
Benjamin Westwood is Departmental Lecturer in the Faculty of English Literature and Language at the University of Oxford, UK, and is finishing a thesis on animals and the intersections of classification and literary form in Victorian literature. He recently contributed an essay to an edited collection, Bathroom Songs: Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick as a Poet (2017), and has an essay on “Edward Lear’s Dancing Lines” forthcoming in Essays in Criticism.