@article{Pordzik2017, author = {Pordzik, Ralph}, title = {George Orwell's Imperial Bestiary: Totemism, Animal Agency and Cross-Species Interaction in "Shooting an Elephant", Burmese Days and "Marrakech"}, series = {Anglia}, volume = {135}, journal = {Anglia}, number = {3}, issn = {1865-8938}, doi = {10.1515/ang-2017-0045}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194200}, pages = {440-466}, year = {2017}, abstract = {This essay argues that Orwell's representation of animals as companion species offers a strikingly new, as-yet largely neglected view of animal agency and interiority in his work. In "Shooting an Elephant", Burmese Days and "Marrakech", the writer's focus on the social reject is supplemented by a marked sense of community implying human tragedy yet framing it within precariously situated human-animal, colonial or urban-imperial transitions that visualise animals as agents of change and co-shaping species interdependent with the lives of the humans that utilize and domineer them. Animals are required whenever Orwell aspires to shift from isolation to communality, from the self-conscious outsider to the larger realm of ideas framing the world in which his characters strive to overstep the accepted lines of social performance and conformity. Read in and around disciplinary structures of rationalization, Orwell's animals appear to secure themselves, quite paradoxically, a place within the normative anthropocentric framework excluding them. They extend beyond anthropomorphising or allegorical modes of description and open up bio-political perspectives within and across regimes of knowledge and empathy. Orwell's writings thus present a challenge to the culturally accredited fantasy of human exceptionalism, collapsing any epistemic space between humans and animals and burying the idea of sustaining radical species distinction.}, language = {en} }