Animals in Human Histories

About The Book

This volume delves into the realm between representative images and real animals. It is a historical inquiry into human interaction with the animals we eat pamper experiment on and imagine as they have been variously domesticated slaughtered loved studied and made into icons of human invention. Common assumptions and experiences with animals have entered into the functioning and conceptualizing of life yet these are historically and culturally contingent. The essays in this volume unveil the ways in which human-animal relationships reveal the interhuman structures of the cultures in which they are formed. By using animals as a lens they refocus our awareness of the ways in which humans have allotted resources gathered knowledge and structured families. The treatment of animals is often a guide to the treatment of people within a society while the perceived 'stewardship' of humans over animals has helped shape the broader environment that both human and nonhuman animals share. The authors tackle their subject from a variety of levels -- popular scientific and economic. The essays explore the vast borderland between human ideas and physical nature regarding animal representation.Contributors include Richard W. Burkhardt Jr. Jonathan Burt Ken C. Erickson Katherine C. Grier Richard C. Hoffmann Andrew C. Isenberg Jacqueline Milliet John Solomon Otto Karen A. Rader Harriet Ritvo Nigel Rothfels Kenneth J. Shapiro and Edward I. Steinhart.Mary Henninger-Voss is an associate of the Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies Princeton University.
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