Book contents
- Vegetarianism and Veganism in Literature from the Ancients to the Twenty-First Century
- Reviews
- Vegetarianism and Veganism in Literature from the Ancients to the Twenty-First Century
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 ‘everybody eating everyone else’
- Chapter 2 Pythagoreans; or, Vegetarians before ‘Vegetarianism’
- Chapter 3 Vegetarianism and the Utopian Novel
- Chapter 4 Vegetarianism as Religion
- Chapter 5 Vegetarianism in the Fiction of Women’s Liberation
- Chapter 6 Animal Abstinence in the Anthropocene
- Chapter 7 ‘Pity the meat!’: Ideology, Metaphor, Violence
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 4 - Vegetarianism as Religion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 May 2024
- Vegetarianism and Veganism in Literature from the Ancients to the Twenty-First Century
- Reviews
- Vegetarianism and Veganism in Literature from the Ancients to the Twenty-First Century
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 ‘everybody eating everyone else’
- Chapter 2 Pythagoreans; or, Vegetarians before ‘Vegetarianism’
- Chapter 3 Vegetarianism and the Utopian Novel
- Chapter 4 Vegetarianism as Religion
- Chapter 5 Vegetarianism in the Fiction of Women’s Liberation
- Chapter 6 Animal Abstinence in the Anthropocene
- Chapter 7 ‘Pity the meat!’: Ideology, Metaphor, Violence
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 4 highlights the way in which vegetarianism may be understood as an alternative (to) religion. The first part of the chapter suggests that after 1962 vegetarianism is central to the fiction of Isaac Bashevis Singer, and that no proper understanding of that fiction can be obtained without first understanding Singer’s vegetarian epistemology. This stands in contrast to the traditional view which is that Singer’s vegetarianism was only a kind of sublimation of Jewish dietary laws. The second part of the chapter focuses on Graham Greene’s The Comedians, arguing that the vegetarianism of Mr and Mrs Smith, which appears at first to be only comic relief, comes to take on much greater significance since it emerges as a powerful kind of surrogate faith – the kind of faith that Brown, the narrator, has lost.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Vegetarianism and Veganism in Literature from the Ancients to the Twenty-First Century , pp. 104 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024