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Description
The volume explores the manner in which literature and culture across various historical periods have responded to the sounds produced by more-than-human beings. The study examines both symbolic and literal representations of these voices, demonstrating how they shape human imagination and interspecies relations. The book is structured in three parts: the first analyses symbolic soundscapes; the second focuses on encounters and exchanges between species; and the third highlights ethical and technological efforts to protect endangered animals and to commemorate those already lost. How literature and culture have responded to the sounds of more-than-human beings through the ages The volume explores the manner in which literature and culture across various historical periods have responded to the sounds produced by more-than-human beings. The study examines both symbolic and literal representations of these voices, demonstrating how they shape human imagination and interspecies relations. The book is structured in three parts: the first analyses symbolic soundscapes; the second focuses on encounters and exchanges between species; and the third highlights ethical and technological efforts to protect endangered animals and to commemorate those already lost. Prof. Dr. Joanna Godlewicz-Adamiec ist Professorin für Literatur mit dem Schwerpunkt Mediävistik an der Universität Warschau, Polen. Prof. Dr. Piotr Kociumbas ist Professor für Literatur an der Universität Warschau, Polen, und spezialisiert auf die Kultur der Frühen Neuzeit.



