HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND U.S. SOCIETY IN THE LONG NINETEENTH CENTURY: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY
ebook

HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND U.S. SOCIETY IN THE LONG NINETEENTH CENTURY: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY (ebook)

DOMINIK OHREM

$1,480.00
IVA incluido
Editorial:
ROUTLEDGE
ISBN:
9781040347690
Formato:
Epublication content package
Idioma:
Inglés
DRM
Si

Volume II continues the discussion of animals/animality in U.S. social and scientific thought to address the ways in which the nexus of ideas surrounding human-animal distinctions became intertwined with interhuman hierarchies and power relations, including through the synergistic dynamics between race and species as co-implicating “taxonomies of power” (Claire Jean Kim) that informed both chattel slavery and settler violence against Indigenous peoples. A second section traces the evolution of animal advocacy from early individual voices to the formation of an organised movement following the Civil War, documenting a shift – however limited by structural constraints – from largely anthropocentric concerns with the social consequences of human cruelty towards other creatures to a broader moral consideration for nonhuman animals in their own right.

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  • HUMANS, ANIMALS, AND U.S. SOCIETY IN THE LONG NINETEENTH CENTURY: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY
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    Volume IV comprises two sections dealing, respectively, with the development of pet culture and its evolution as a cultural institution over the course of the long nineteenth century, and with the variegated presence of domesticated (and feralised) animals in U.S. cities. Closely tied to the antebellum rise of the American middle-class family and the sentimentalisation of (cert...

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    Volume V covers three key areas of interaction and concern that shaped Americans’ relations with wild animals. The sources in section one focus on hunting – a practice that among early republicans was still associated with the “savage” existence of Indigenous peoples and regarded as incompatible with the agrarian virtues they deemed essential, yet which eventually became emblem...

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    Volume III hones in on the relations between humans and domesticated animals in U.S. society, illuminating how these relations were integral to key developments of the long nineteenth century. A first section explores the role of domesticated animals in what for most of the nineteenth century remained a predominantly agrarian world (albeit one undergoing significant change), fo...

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    Volume I traces the significance of animals, and the "problem" of animality, within the currents of U.S. social and scientific thought during a period marked by a rapid expansion of American and transatlantic print culture. It provides insights into how evolving ideas about animal intelligence, sociality, morality, and language interacted with contemporary notions of human natu...

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