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  1.  20
    Posthumanism in art and science: a reader.Giovanni Aloi & Susan McHugh (eds.) - 2021 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Posthumanism has come to synthesize philosophical, literary, and artistic responses to the pressures of technology, globalization, and mass extinction in the Anthropocene. It asks what it can mean to be human in an increasingly more-than-human world that has lost faith in the ideal of humanism, the autonomous, rational subject, and it models generative alternatives cognizant of the demands of social and ecological justice. Posthumanism in Art and Science is an anthology of indispensable statements and artworks that provide an unprecedented mapping (...)
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  2. Animals.Susan McHugh - 2020 - In Sherryl Vint (ed.), After the Human: Culture, Theory and Criticism in the 21st Century. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
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  3.  70
    Bitch, Bitch, Bitch: Personal Criticism, Feminist Theory, and Dog‐writing.Susan Mchugh - 2012 - Hypatia 27 (3):616-635.
    By the turn of the twenty-first century, women writing about electing to share their lives with female canines directly confront a strange sort of backlash. Even as their extensions of the feminist forms of personal criticism contribute to significant developments in theories of sex, gender, and species, they become targets of criticism as “indulgent” for focusing on their dogs. Comparing these elements in and around popular memoirs like Caroline Knapp's Pack of Two: The Intricate Bond between People and Dogs (1998) (...)
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  4. Loving camels, sacrificing sheep, slaughtering gazelles : human-animal relations in contemporary desert fiction.Susan McHugh - 2016 - In Kristin Asdal & Tone Druglitrø (eds.), Humans, Animals and Biopolitics: The More-Than-Human Condition. Routledge.
     
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  5.  33
    Modern Animals: From Subjects to Agents in Literary Studies.Susan McHugh - 2009 - Society and Animals 17 (4):363-367.
    Advancing theories of literature and animality requires both recognizing the failures of traditional humanist models that separate and elevate people over all "things" animal as well as identifying and developing alternative forms. Along with providing fresh readings and important insights about representative texts in the literary canon, two new books—Carrie Rohman's Stalking the Subject: Modernism and the Animal and Philip Armstrong's What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity —illustrate how this challenge is being addressed. Strategically, Rohman works within established (...)
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  6.  25
    Marrying My Bitch: J. R. Ackerley's Pack Sexualities.Susan McHugh - 2000 - Critical Inquiry 27 (1):21-41.
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  7.  15
    Remembering a Renaissance Elephant and His Mahout.Susan McHugh - 2012 - Society and Animals 20 (3):314-315.
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  8.  75
    Video Dog Star: William Wegman, Aesthetic Agency, and the Animal in Experimental Video Art.Susan McHugh - 2001 - Society and Animals 9 (3):229-251.
    The canine photographs, videos, and photographic narratives of artist William Wegman frame questions of animal aesthetic agency. Over the past 30 years, Wegman's dog images shift in form and content in ways that reflect the artist's increasing anxiety over his control of the art-making process once he becomes identified, in his own words, as "the dog photographer". Wegman's dog images claim unique cultural prominence, appearing regularly in fine art museums as well as on broadcast television. But, as Wegman comes to (...)
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  9.  16
    Critical Animal Studies: Thinking the Unthinkable. Ed. John Sorenson. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2014. 346 pp. [REVIEW]Susan McHugh - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (2):414-415.
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