From the Publisher
“Primo Levi’s remarkable explorations of 'the human', the mind and body at their limit in Auschwitz, have long been acknowledged and explored. Damiano Benvegnù’s powerful and meticulously researched new book is the first to probe with real ethical and theoretical depth Levi’s extensive, parallel reflections on 'the animal’, as it abuts and challenges our notion of 'the human', its shared sufferings, technologies and dynamics of creation. The book is sure to make a profound impact on the field.” (Robert S. C. Gordon, Professor of Italian at University of Cambridge, UK, and author of Primo Levi's Ordinary Virtues)
“Few authors were able to both experience and question the human as radically as Primo Levi did. And yet, the author of If This Is a Man has given us much more than another testimony of “humanism.” With accuracy and sensibility, Damiano Benvegnù illuminates Levi’s disposition to see the human, the inhuman, and the nonhuman as contiguous zones, thus blurring the boundaries of ethics, ontology, and imagination. Intense, inspired, and deeply researched, Animals and Animality in Primo Levi’s Work is an invaluable contribution to the fields of animal humanities, ecocriticism, and Italian studies.” (Serenella Iovino, Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Turin, Italy, and author of Ecocriticism and Italy: Ecology, Resistance, and Liberation)
“Challenging the standard anthropocentric reading of Primo Levi’s work, Benvegnù compellingly argues that Levi’s wide-ranging oeuvre has much to offer contemporary posthumanist theory and animal studies. Benvegnù’s subtle and richly detailed analyses introduce readers to a “new” Levi, one who aims to rethink the question of human and animal suffering and ultimately reconfigure relations between humanity and animality from a planetary and cosmic perspective. This fascinating and innovative study will be welcomed by scholars across a wide range of disciplines.” (Matthew Calarco, Professor of Philosophy at California State University, Fullerton, USA)
“Through the lens of human and non-human suffering, Damiano Benvegnu’s brilliantly engrossing study of Primo Levi’s Animals and Animality offers ground-breaking insights into the “animal question” through its sensitive exploration of the most disturbing “human question”: the Holocaust. Exploring Levi’s writings on his de-humanizing experience in Auschwitz while also considering our cruel treatment of animals, Benvegnu reads Levi’s ‘literary animals’ as ‘animal testimony’ that shatters and re-formulates the very definition of the (in)humane human.” (Heather I. Sullivan, Professor of German at Trinity University, USA)