Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations and a note on the text
- Introduction: prescriptions
- 1 The rights of brutes
- 2 The purer nutriment: diet and Shelley's biographies
- 3 In the face: the poetics of the natural diet
- 4 Apollo in the jungle: healthy morals and the body beautiful
- 5 Intemperate figures: re-fining culture
- 6 Sustaining natures: Shelley and ecocriticism
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Title in the series
4 - Apollo in the jungle: healthy morals and the body beautiful
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations and a note on the text
- Introduction: prescriptions
- 1 The rights of brutes
- 2 The purer nutriment: diet and Shelley's biographies
- 3 In the face: the poetics of the natural diet
- 4 Apollo in the jungle: healthy morals and the body beautiful
- 5 Intemperate figures: re-fining culture
- 6 Sustaining natures: Shelley and ecocriticism
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Title in the series
Summary
Unsophisticated instinct is invariably unerring; but to decide on the fitness of animal food, from the perverted appetites which its constrained adoption produces, is to make the criminal a judge of his own cause: – it is even worse, it is appealing to the infatuated drunkard in a question of the salubrity of brandy.
Shelley, V, J VI,9And human hands first mimicked and then mocked,
With moulded limbs more lovely than its own,
The human form, till marble grew divine;
And mothers, gazing, drank the love men see
Reflected in their race, behold, and perish.
He told the hidden power of herbs and springs,
And Disease drank and slept. Death grew like sleep.
Shelley, Prometheus Unbound, II.iv.80INTRODUCTION
With the exemplification of Shelley's poetic figures of diet in mind, what are the networks which set up the grounding notions of ‘aesthetics’ and ‘economies’? This chapter explores Shelley's vegetarian prose and its sources, analysing the implications that vegetarianism brings to bear upon the text and upon theories of writing and representation. It puts in play the concept of ‘disfiguration’, shorthand for the notion that the act of representing involves a degree of violence to the body of the thing represented (through masking, elision, incompleteness and so on); and that this violence can be traced in the letter of the resultant text as a mark or taint. The vegetarian writers who influenced Shelley were anxious that language should not be disfiguring, that it should mark without tainting. This anxiety suggests political implications about the representation of the body in society.
Disfiguration is countered by nature's silent eloquence.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shelley and the Revolution in TasteThe Body and the Natural World, pp. 127 - 169Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995