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From: Twentieth Century Literature
Date: 20020922
Author:Smith, Craig
In 1933 Virginia Woolf published Flush: A Biography, an experiment in genre that purports to tell the life story of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's canine companion. It was Woolf's most popular book during her lifetime, but it has subsequently become her most neglected. Scholarly opinion has generally dismissed Flush as a trivial potboiler, unworthy of its author's position as a major modernist innovator. The present essay will attempt to reassess that judgment by viewing the text in relation to recent developments in the study of animal behavior and nonhuman subjectivity, by ...
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