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Fit for a Dog? Food Sharing and the Medieval Human/Animal Divide

机译:适合狗? 食品分享和中世纪人类/动物鸿沟

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摘要

Medieval unease with human animality manifests itself strongly in attitudes toward and proscriptions concerning food sharing. This is particularly true with dogs, the nonhuman animals with whom humans most intimately share both the procurement and consumption of food, and who are routinely figured as embodying many of the best and worst characteristics associated with humans. Through a range of late medieval texts, this paper will probe the precarious boundary between human and nonhuman animals in the medieval imagination by considering the portrait of Chaucer's Prioress and her lapdogs in The Canterbury Tales; depictions of dogs in the hunt in medieval romance; and the strange tale of Sir Gowther, whose penance is to eat only what he receives from the mouth of a dog. Rather than supporting claims for an essential difference between human and nonhuman animal, such examples further emphasize the fluidity of the two categories.
机译:中世纪随着人类的动画而不安,强烈表现出对食物分享的态度和掠夺的态度。 这种狗尤其如此,人类最紧密地分享食物的采购和消费,以及常规认为与人类相关的许多最佳和最糟糕的特征是常见的。 通过一系列后期中世纪的文本,本文将通过考虑Chaucer在坎特伯雷故事的肖像和她的Lapdogs在中世纪和她的Lapdogs肖像中探讨了中世纪的人类和非人类动物之间的不稳定边界; 在中世纪浪漫的猎物中描绘狗; 和奇怪的故事,狡猾的故事,他的忏悔只吃了他从狗的嘴里收到的东西。 这些例子而不是支持对人与非人类动物之间的基本差异的要求,而且进一步强调了两类的流动性。

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