![]() ![]() On its side, the bear seemingly 'shows' a post-colonial attitude subversively resisting a typically Western anthropomorphic allegorization. ![]() ![]() My interest focuses particularly on Canadian Marian Engel's Bear, where the writer tries to deal with unspeakable subjects between a woman and a bear: through an act of radical approach to its physical reality, the former comes first to recognize the latter, and then to accept its Otherness. This essay intends to underline how, from this viewpoint, a few novels coming from the post-colonial area, where animal tales often show how interwoven humans and animals are and how they are constructed in relation to each other supply interesting case studies. When trying to give a literary representation of the animal, it is particularly important to adopt some measures which, following the trajectory of a genuine, positive 'becoming-animal', will safeguard its independence and avoid reducing it to metaphorically anthropomorphic representations. The primacy acquired by nature in our current culture has given way to several issues not strictly connected with an immediate and 'purely' ecological interest: there is rather the need to question how we conceive the animal with a focus on the possibility to transcend Western cultural heritage. ![]()
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