%0 Journal Article %T Hungry Unlike the Wolf: Ecology, Posthumanism, Narratology in Fred Vargas*s Seeking Whom He May Devour %A John Parham %J Ecozon@ : European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment %D 2012 %I EASLCE & GIECO %X This paper examines posthumanism as a philosophical position equipped to inform ecocriticism and the potential of popular fiction to articulate ecological complexity. Posthumanism will be reappraised as a dialectical model that decentres the human in relation to &evolutionary, ecological, or technological coordinates* (Wolfe 2010: xvi) while nevertheless retaining a sense of the integrity of, and boundaries between, human and nonhuman species or phenomena. It will be argued that a novelistic emphasis on human being, agency, and action, coupled with devices of genre, plot, atnd narrative 每 are consistent with the process of human self坼examinaion engendered by posthumanism. The essay will, thereafter, illustrate and examine this approach through the French crime writer Fred Vargas*s1999 novel Seeking Whom He May Devour. Identifying two human protagonists 每 the Canadian conservationist Johnstone and his girlfriend Camille 每 an initial decentring of the human subject will be examined in relation to two equivalent, nonhuman protagonists, the French Alps and the wolf. Utilising newspaper interviews that highlight Vargas*s own posthumanist perspective (grounded in her profession as an archaeologist), I will examine a) how the novel explores appropriate relationships between human and nonhuman animals; b) how Vargas utilises both the generic features of the crime novel 每 e.g. the resolution of a &crime* 每 and the subtle narrative manipulations of character focalisation to construct (via the preferred &point of iew* offered by Camille) a posthumanist position on human/animal relations which argas explicitly opposes to the inhumanism represented by Johnstone. %U http://www.ecozona.eu/index.php/journal/article/view/282/626