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Trixy: A Novel
Northwestern University Press, 2019 eISBN: 978-0-8101-4044-8 | Paper: 978-0-8101-4043-1 Library of Congress Classification PS3142.T75 2019 Dewey Decimal Classification 813.4
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Trixy is a 1904 novel by the best-selling but largely forgotten American author and women’s rights activist Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. The book decries the then common practice of vivisection, or scientific experiments on live animals. In Trixy, contemporary readers can trace the roots of the early animal rights movement in Phelps’s influential campaign to introduce legislation to regulate or end this practice. Phelps not only presents a narrative polemic against the cruelty of vivisection but argues that training young doctors in it makes them bad physicians. Emily E. VanDette’s introduction demonstrates that Phelps’s protest writing, which included fiction, pamphlets, essays, and speeches, was well ahead of its time. See other books on: Animal experimentation | Animal Rights | Classics | Dogs | Human-animal relationships See other titles from Northwestern University Press |
Nearby on shelf for American literature / Individual authors / 19th century:
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