25th Susanne M. Glasscock Book Prize: What is Extinction? A Natural and Cultural History of Last Animals
The Melbern G. Glasscock Center for Humanities Research at Texas A&M University has awarded the Twenty-Fifth Annual Susanne M. Glasscock Humanities Book Prize for Interdisciplinary Scholarship to Joshua Schuster, for his book What is Extinction? A Natural and Cultural History of Last Animals, published by Fordham University Press in 2023.
Joshua Schuster is Professor of English and Director of the Centre for Theory and Criticism at Western University in Canada. He is the author of What Is Extinction? A Natural and Cultural History of Last Animals (2023), co-author of Calamity Theory: Three Critiques of Existential Risk (2021), and The Ecology of Modernism: American Environments and Avant-Garde Poetics (2015).
Life on Earth is facing a mass extinction event of our own making. Human activity is changing the biology and the meaning of extinction. What Is Extinction? examines several key moments that have come to define the terms of extinction over the past two centuries, exploring instances of animal and human finitude and the cultural forms used to document and interpret these events.
Offering a critical theory for the critically endangered, Joshua Schuster proposes that different discourses of limits and lastness appear in specific extinction events over time as a response to changing attitudes toward species frailty. Understanding these extinction events also involves examining what happens when the conceptual and cultural forms used to account for species finitude are pressed to their limits as well. Schuster provides close readings of several case studies of extinction that bring together environmental humanities and multispecies methods with media-specific analyses at the terminus of life.
What Is Extinction? delves into the development of last animal photography, the anthropological and psychoanalytic fascination with human origins and ends, the invention of new literary genres of last fictions, the rise of new extreme biopolitics in the Third Reich that attempted to change the meaning of extinction, and the current pursuit of de-extinction technologies. Schuster offers timely interpretations of how definitions and visions of extinction have changed in the past and continue to change in the present.
Public Lecture & Award Presentation
Tuesday, November 19
12:00 - 1:00 PM
MSC 2300 D
The prize, first awarded in 1999, was permanently endowed in December 2000 by Melbern G. Glasscock ’59 as a gift for his wife, Susanne, for whom the prize is named. This unique prize celebrates outstanding works of original, interdisciplinary humanities scholarship that appeal to both academic and wider audiences.