Canine Death in Canonical American Fiction
By (Author) Amelia
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd April 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Animals and society / Animal rights - issues and debates
Hardback
1
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This book investigates the death and suffering of domestic dogs that occurs on the peripheries of classic American novels and complicates the reductive and overly simplistic portrayal of these animals as mans best friend. These scenes are jarringly underrepresented in literary criticism yet overrepresented in well-read fiction. This book looks at the wealth of human-dog relations that the archive currently does not address by juxtaposing sentimental dog novels with a variety of other genres that include dogs more sparingly. The author explores masculine and feminine coming-of-age narratives as well as naturalist and postmodern novels. The work reads texts and other forms of media through the prism of animal studies, critical race theory, gender studies, and ecocriticism in conversation with more customary literary emphases on genre, motif, focalization, and symbolism to investigate the pattern of literary reliance on dogs as both outlets and scapegoats for human violence. The arguments challenge the forced and increasing dependence of canines on humans as well as the inevitability of their sacrifice in the construction of narratives. Thus, a core theme of my project is the interrogation of authorial reliance on dog death as merely instrumental to human self-realization and the production of cheap sentiment. Finally, it contributes to environmental humanities and animal studies by coining new keywords for critical analysis that expand the parameters by which classic novels can be interpreted and shift the focus from animal characters as peripheral devices to essential literary features.
Amelia (Molly) Labenski is a Sessional Instructor in the Department of Language & Literature at Concordia University of Edmonton.