OGOM Company of Wolves: The Book

Woo hoo. We are proud to present the details of the OGOM Company of Wolves book (MUP, 2017). There are 3 publications in total (one book and two special journal issues) and this is the first. More to follow on the other two. We think you’ll agree that it looks very special indeed and it is a fitting legacy re: our fabulous conference. Thank you to everyone who has made submissions to the project. More will be revealed shortly. Wolftastic!!

OGOM Events

The Company of Wolves: Werewolves, Wolves, and Wild Children – Narratives of Sociality and Animality

Brief description of the volume’s scope and content

This volume of essays presents further research from the Open Graves, Open Minds Project at the University of Hertfordshire (soon to be an internationally recognised research centre). It follows on from the previous MUP book, Open Graves, Open Minds: Representations of vampires and the Undead from the Enlightenment to the Present Day. The collection connects together innovative research on the cultural significance of wolves, wild children, and werewolves from a variety of perspectives as portrayed in different media and genres ranging through folktales and Gothic literature through sound, fashion, film, and TV, to contemporary poetry and visual art. In the book, eminent scholars and early career researchers cover a range of narratives and discourses: stories of feral children which question the boundaries between animal and human are explored alongside considerations of the cultural significance of the wolf in nature and analyses of the modern werewolf from nineteenth-century Gothic through early cinema to present-day TV and Young Adult fiction.

The book explores crucial questions concerning human social existence and its animal substrate, and the intersection between the human and the wolfishly bestial as expressed in narrative media from a variety of epochs and cultures. It forms a coherent whole; though covering a fascinating diversity of topics, the essays have been selected and guided towards highlighting certain recurring motifs which are drawn together by an erudite introduction.

We begin with the wolf itself as it has been interpreted as a cultural symbol and how it figures in contemporary debates about wilderness and nature. Alongside this, we consider eighteenth-century debates about wild children ­– often thought to have been raised by wolves and other animals – and their role in key questions about the origins of language and society, moving to the fictional representation of such children. The collection continues with a series of essays on werewolves and other shapeshifters as depicted in folk tales, literature, film, and other media, concluding with a section on the transition from animal to human in fashion, art, and poetry.

Wolves have long been the archetypal enemy of human company, preying on the unguarded boundaries of civilisation, threatening the pastoral of ideal sociality and figuring as sexual predators. Yet, in their way, with their complex pack interactions, they have served as a model for society. Lately, this ancient enemy has been rehabilitated and reappraised, and rewilding projects have attempted to admit them more closely into our lives. Our company with wolves has inspired fiction from Ovid, through Perrault and the Grimms’ narrators, to Bram Stoker and Kipling; and, more recently, to Angela Carter, Neil Jordan, Anne Rice, Marcus Sedgwick and Glen Duncan.

Werewolves and shapeshifters have served in narrative fiction to question what humanity is; weres tend to reveal the complex affinities and differences between our existence as linguistic, social subjects and our physiological continuity with other animals. They also draw our attention to questions of hierarchy and sexuality, to the instinctive, and to what extent our conceptions of these are ideological.

Werewolves (along with vampires) have recently become humanised, even romanticised, as identity politics has become mainstream and the Other assimilated. As with the vampire, werewolves invite analyses about otherness, as this collection demonstrates. And just as the vampire figure both conditions the shape of the subgenres it dwells in and draws other genres into its sphere, so fictions about werewolves, wild humans, and human-animal relationships also invoke questions of genre and intertextuality. The essays in the collection address these issues.

Amidst concerns about our relationship with nature, in a culture informed by Romanticism and a post-Enlightenment doubt about the centrality of humanity, contemporary fictions often turn to the animal, and to transitions between animal and human to interrogate what is special about our species. In her werewolf paranormal romance, Shiver, the YA author Maggie Stiefvater quotes Rilke: ‘even the most clever of animals see that we are not surely at home in our interpreted world’. This captures the amphibious nature of being human and raises the kinds of questions that these essays explore and illuminate.

Contents list 

Preface

Sir Christopher Frayling

Introduction

Sam George and Bill Hughes

Cultural images of the wolf, the werewolf and the wolf child

  1. Wolf: A social and cultural creature

Garry Marvin

  1. This is what it sounds like when wolves cry: Storytelling, wolf children, and the state of nature

Sam George

  1. Wolves and lies: A writer’s perspective

Marcus Sedgwick

  1. The sound of the cinematic werewolf

Stacy Abbott

Innocence and Experience: Brute creation, wild beast or child of nature

  1. Wild sanctuary: Running into the forest in Russian fairy tales

Shannon Scott

  1. ‘No more than a brute or a wild beast’: Wagner the Werewolf, Sweeney Todd, and the limits of human responsibility

Joseph Crawford

 The inner beast: Scientific experimentation in George MacDonald’s The History of Photogen and Nycteris

Rebecca Langworthy

  1. Werewolves and white trash: Brutishness, discrimination and the lower-class wolfman from The Wolf Man to True Blood

Victoria Amador

Re-inventing the wolf: Intertextual and metafictional manifestations

  1. The price of flesh is love’: Commodification, corporeality, and paranormal romance in Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber.

Bill Hughes

  1. I am the Bad Wolf. I create myself’: The metafictional meanings of lycanthropic transformation in Doctor Who

Ivan Phillips

  1. Growing pains of the teenage werewolf: YA literature and the metaphorical wolf

Kaja Franck

Animal selves: Becoming wolf 

  1. Wearing the wolf: Fur, fashion and species transvestism

Catherine Spooner

  1. A running wolf and other grey animals: The various shapes of Marcus Coates

Sarah Wade

  1. ‘Stinking of me’: Transformations and animal selves in contemporary women’s poetry

Polly Atkin

20150903_102857_resized

 

 

About Sam George

Associate Professor of Research, School of Humanities, University of Hertfordshire Co-convenor OGOM Project
This entry was posted in OGOM News, Publications and tagged , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

19 − 1 =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.