Costello's son, a physics professor, admires her literary achievements,
but dreads his mother's lecturing on animal rights at the college where
he teaches. His colleagues resist her argument that human reason is
overrated and that the inability to reason does not diminish the value
of life; his wife denounces his mother's vegetarianism as a form of
moral superiority.
At the dinner that follows her first
lecture, the guests confront Costello with a range of sympathetic and
skeptical reactions to issues of animal rights, touching on broad
philosophical, anthropological, and religious perspectives. Painfully
for her son, Elizabeth Costello seems offensive and flaky, but--dare he
admit it?--strangely on target.
Here the internationally
renowned writer J. M. Coetzee uses fiction to present a powerfully
moving discussion of animal rights in all their complexity. He draws us
into Elizabeth Costello's own sense of mortality, her compassion for
animals, and her alienation from humans, even from her own family. In
his fable, presented as a Tanner Lecture sponsored by the University
Center for Human Values at Princeton University, Coetzee immerses us in
a drama reflecting the real-life situation at hand: a writer delivering
a lecture on an emotionally charged issue at a prestigious university.
Literature, philosophy, performance, and deep human conviction--Coetzee
brings all these elements into play.
As in the story of
Elizabeth Costello, the Tanner Lecture is followed by responses
treating the reader to a variety of perspectives, delivered by leading
thinkers in different fields. Coetzee's text is accompanied by an
introduction by political philosopher Amy Gutmann and responsive essays
by religion scholar Wendy Doniger, primatologist Barbara Smuts,
literary theorist Marjorie Garber, and moral philosopher Peter Singer,
author of Animal Liberation. Together the lecture-fable and the essays
explore the palpable social consequences of uncompromising moral
conflict and confrontation. The idea of human cruelty to animals so
consumes novelist Elizabeth Costello in her later years that she can no
longer look another person in the eye: humans, especially meat-eating
ones, seem to her to be conspirators in a crime of stupefying magnitude
taking place on farms and in slaughterhouses, factories, and
laboratories across the world. Here the internationally renowned writer
J.M. Coetzee uses fiction to present a powerfully moving discussion of
animal rights in all their complexity. He draws us into Elizabeth
Costello's own sense of mortality, her compassion for animals, and her
alienation from humans, even from her own family. In his fable,
presented as a Tanner Lecture sponsored by the University Center for
Human Values at Princeton University, Coetzee immerses us in a drama
reflecting the real-life situation at hand: a writer delivering a
lecture on an emotionally charged issue at a prestigious university. As
in the story of Elizabeth Costello, the Tanner Lecture is followed by
responses treating the reader to a variety of perspectives, delivered
by leading thinkers in different fields.