Lucinda Cole's
Imperfect Creatures offers the first
full-length study of the shifting, unstable, but foundational
status of 'vermin,' as creatures and category in the early modern
literary, scientific, and political imagination. In the space
between theology and an emergent empiricism, Cole's argument
engages a wide historical swath of canonical early modern literary
texts -- William Shakespeare's
Macbeth, Christopher
Marlowe's
The Jew of Malta, Abraham Cowley's
The Plagues
of Egypt, Thomas Shadwell's
The Virtuoso, the Earl of
Rochester's 'A Ramble in St. James's Park,' and Daniel Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe and
Journal of the Plague Year,
alongside other nonliterary primary sources and under-examined
archival materials from the period, including treatises on animal
trials, grain shortages, rabies, and comparative neuroanatomy.
As Cole illustrates, human health and demographic problems --
notably those of feeding populations periodically stricken by
hunger, disease, and famine -- were tied to larger questions about
food supplies, property laws, national identity, and the
theological imperatives that underwrote humankind's claim to
dominion over the animal kingdom. In this context, Cole's study
indicates, so-called 'vermin�' occupied liminal spaces between
subject and object, nature and animal, animal and the devil, the
devil and disease� even reason and madness. This verminous
discourse formed a foundational category used to carve out
humankind� relationship to an unpredictable, irrational natural
world, but it evolved into a form for thinking about not merely
animals but anything that threatened the health of the body
politic� humans, animals, and even thoughts.