Imaginary Animals: The Monstrous, the Wondrous and the Human
By (Author) Boria Sax
Reaktion Books
Reaktion Books
1st November 2022
1st August 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
398.2454
Paperback
278
Width 190mm, Height 250mm
Medieval authors placed fantastic creatures inthe borders of manuscripts, since they markthe boundaries of our understanding. Talesthroughout the world generally place fabulousbeasts in marginal locations deserts,deep woods, remote islands, glaciers, oceandepths, mountain peaks, caves, swamps,heavenly bodies and alternate universes.According to apocalyptic visions of the Bible,they will also proliferate as we approachthe end of time.
"Author Boria Sax argues that monsters help us by giving concrete form to our fears, whilewonders incarnate our hopes. Enlisting cultural support, whether from Hieronymus Bosch or PT Barnum, this teacher at Sing Sing prison shows how mermaids and dragons, even superheroes and Tamagochis, help us measure what it means to be human. A well illustrated and philosophically sophisticated book.' World of Interiors; 'A thought-provoking analysis of bestial creations, this illustrated compendium by Boria Sax scrutinizes artistic and literary models, ranging from Chauvet cave art from 36,000 BCE to political cartoons, graphic Japanese novels, and postmodern robotics. Conclusions about the nature and purpose of fantasy animals draw on scripture, anthropology, medicine, myth, and psychology . . . An intriguing, highly readable reference work at a low price, Saxs multifaceted work covers a host of reference needs. Recommended.' Choice; 'Speaking as someone fascinated by all animals from earliest childhood, I found Imaginary Animals to be an intriguing and thought-provoking discovery. Scholarly and well-researched, without being either ponderous or condescending, it is written with real wit, and with a contagious delight in its subject rare in such a study. I would recommend it enthusiastically to anyone interested in the astonishing range of folkloric, religious, cultural, philosophic and political symbolism with which human beings have regarded and ceaselessly recreated real animals in our time together on this planet.' Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn
Boria Sax teaches at Sing Sing prison and online in the graduate literature program at Mercy College. He has published many books including City of Ravens (2012), Imaginary Animals (Reaktion, 2013) and Dinomania (Reaktion, 2019).