The Mark of the Beast historically and critically examines the dire effects of the process of animalization on both humans and animals. Roberts provides a general account of the theoretical division between humans and animals begun largely in the work of Aristotle and continued in that of Descartes and Kant. Following the philosophical provenance of the idea of animality, Roberts explores the practical and "scientific" uses of this idea, focusing largely on what Stephen J. Gould terms the "biodeterministic tradition" by evaluating the primarily ninteenth century theories of atavism, craniology, recapitulation, and so on, while also exploring the use of medical and psychological techniques of animalization.
Acknowledgments
Preface
PART I ANIMALITY IN THEORY: “PHILOSOPHY” AND “SCIENCE”
I From Aristotle to Foucault
II From Gobineau to Freud
III From Tubal Ligation to Slaughterhouse
IV Exhibit and Punish: From Cages to Colonization
PART II ANIMALITY IN ACT: SLAVERY AND HOLOCAUST
V Aristotle Redux and the Slave Trade
VI Narratives of Oppression
VII Humans as Sub-Animals
VIII Emaciation and Slaughter
PART III RESTORING THE ANIMAL MODERNITY AND POSTMODERNITY
IX Cinema and Popular Culture
X The New Racism and Sexism
XI Sociobiology, Pop Ethology, and Restating Animality
XII Containing the Criminogenic
XIII The Beast and the Human / Machine
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Mark S. Roberts is a member of the Department of Philosophy at Suffolk County Community College in New York. He has written numerous works in areas of contemporary French thought, psychology, aesthetics, philosophy of medicine, and media studies.