The words \'Anthropocene animals\' conjure pictures of dead albatrosses\' bodies filled with plastic fragments, polar bears adrift on melting ice sheets, solitary elephants in the savannah.
Beside them, another figure appears in the mirror: that of an anthropos without a capital A, epitome of subaltern humans with their challenges and inequalities, a companion species on the difficult path of co-evolution..
In Calvino\'s stories, ants, cats, chickens, rabbits, gorillas, and other critters emerge as complex subjects and inhabitants of a world under siege.
Italo Calvino\'s Animals explores Anthropocene animals through the visionary eyes of a classic modern author.
Among them, there are humans, too.
But animals in the Anthropocene are not simply \'out there.\' Threatening and threatened, they populate cities and countryside, often trapped in industrial farms, zoos, labs.
Suspended between the impersonal nature of the Great Extinction and the singularity of exotic individuals, these creatures appear remote, disconnected from us.
The words \'Anthropocene animals\' conjure pictures of dead albatrosses\' bodies filled with plastic fragments, polar bears adrift on melting ice sheets, solitary elephants in the savannah