The Animals in That Country

The Animals in That Country is a 1968 poetry collection written by Canadian author Margaret Atwood. It is her fifth volume of poetry.[1]

Like other works by Atwood, The Animals in That Country explores themes relating to human behaviour and celebration of the natural world, with some of the poems expressing an ecocentric perspective and using the difference between the animals of the Old World and the New World to scrutinize issues like power politics, feminism and human existence.[1][2]

Title

The title of the volume makes a distinction between "that country" and "this country" as a commentary on the differences between Europe and the New World. The animals in "that country" are described as having "the faces of people" and their deaths being romanticized as coming about as part of ceremonial or legendary scenarios, such as fox hunts or bull fights. By comparison, the animals in "this country", have "the faces of animals" and perish in commonplace and unsung ways, such as being hit by cars.[3]

gollark: One of the SCP-001s was that but it's a database entry and not a website.
gollark: We need the concept of bees or we won't have it.
gollark: We did use a GPT to improve the communist manifesto one time.
gollark: I must have slipped on the concept of bees and dropped it.
gollark: Where'd my non-sphere go?

References

  1. Baldwin, Emma (2016-12-11). "Analysis of The animals in that country by Margaret Atwood". Poem Analysis. Retrieved 2019-04-20.
  2. Hatch, Ronald B. (2000). "Margaret Atwood, the Land, and Ecology". In Nischik, Reingard M. (ed.). Margaret Atwood: Works and Impact. Woodbridge, UK and Rochester, NY: Camden House. pp. 184–187. ISBN 9781571131393.
  3. Thomas, Paul Lee (2007). Reading, Learning, Teaching Margaret Atwood. New York, Washington DC: Peter Lang. p. 123. ISBN 9780820486710.


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