<p>A&nbsp;comprehensive&nbsp;overview of the history of bird keeping across the world.</p><p>This book discusses the history of aviculture and the cultural extent of keeping and raising birds in captivity for pleasure companion ornamental&nbsp;reasons religious causes or various economic or practical purposes. Since the dawn of mankind&nbsp;humans have kept birds in captivity. Several species are truly domesticated while others have simply been bred in captivity for many generations. Today bird-keeping&nbsp;for pleasure appears to be declining in the West mostly due to bird protection and growing awareness&nbsp;about conservation issues. Although aviculture has had and still has a deep impact on human beings it remains a neglected field within humanities and&nbsp;social sciences. Relatively little is published about the cultural and historical aspects of aviculture.&nbsp;This anthology is intended for a general audience of readers and it shows various aspects of keeping&nbsp;birds in captivity for pleasure ornamental reasons&nbsp;or practical purposes around the world.</p><p>It also deals with the great variety and complexity of the&nbsp;practice of keeping birds and the specific cultures which have developed around it.&nbsp;The first chapter gives a brief introduction to the questions we focus on in the book together&nbsp;with a historic overview from prehistory to early twenty-first century including pet birds among&nbsp;natives in South America Southeast Asia and Africa sailors and their parrots birds in religious rituals primitive domesticates in various peasant&nbsp;societies etc. The other chapters offer descriptive case studies in pre-modern and early modern ways of bird-keeping in various historical contexts. Modern aviculture in zoological&nbsp;gardens is discussed and specific bird categories within twentieth-century aviculture are described&nbsp;in some chapters. We encounter sophisticated bird-keeping in pre-Columbian societies Norse trade with falcons the European craze for songbirds&nbsp;practices with captive birds used in human habitations to keep vermin under control and how avicultural expertise is used for trying to save vanishing species by breeding them in captivity.</p><p>Together these topics illustrate the great variety&nbsp;and complexities of bird-keeping practice. The authors are specialists in aviculture and&nbsp;most of them hail from the countries about which they write. This book bridges the disciplines of&nbsp;cultural anthropology ethnobiology history natural history and ornithology and is intended to benchmark the development of the subject for a&nbsp;broader audience which until now has had few possibilities to become acquainted with it.&nbsp;</p>
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