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Beastly Natures Dorothee Brantz

Beastly Natures By Dorothee Brantz

Beastly Natures by Dorothee Brantz


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Beastly Natures Summary

Beastly Natures: Animals, Humans, and the Study of History by Dorothee Brantz

Although the animal may be, as Nietzsche argued, ahistorical, living completely in the present, it nonetheless plays a crucial role in human history. The fascination with animals that leads not only to a desire to observe and even live alongside them, but to capture or kill them, is found in all civilizations. The essays collected in Beastly Natures show how animals have been brought into human culture, literally helping to build our societies (as domesticated animals have done) or contributing, often in problematic ways, to our concept of the wild.

The book begins with a group of essays that approach the historical relevance of human-animal relations seen from the perspectives of various disciplines and suggest ways in which animals might be brought into formal studies of history. Differences in species and location can greatly affect the shape of human-animal interaction, and so the essays that follow address a wide spectrum of topics, including the demanding fate of the working horse, the complex image of the American alligator (at turns a dangerous predator and a tourist attraction), the zoo gardens of Victorian England, the iconography of the rhinoceros and the preference it reveals in society for myth over science, relations between humans and wolves in Europe, and what we can learn from societys enthusiasm for political animals, such as the pets of the American presidents and the Soviet Unions space dogs. Taken together, these essays suggest new ways of looking not only at animals but at human history.

Contributors

Mark V. Barrow Jr., Virginia Tech * Peter Edwards, Roehampton University * Kelly Enright, Rutgers University * Oliver Hochadel, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona * Uwe Lubken, Rachel Carson Center, Munich * Garry Marvin, Roehampton University * Clay McShane, Northeastern University * Amy Nelson, Virginia Tech * Susan Pearson, Northwestern University * Helena Pycior, University of WisconsinMilwaukee * Harriet Ritvo, Massachusetts Institute of Technology * Nigel Rothfels, University of WisconsinMilwaukee * Joel A. Tarr, Carnegie Mellon University * Mary Weismantel, Northwestern University

About Dorothee Brantz

Dorothee Brantz is Director of the Center for Metropolitan Studies at Technische Universitat Berlin.

Additional information

NPB9780813929477
9780813929477
0813929474
Beastly Natures: Animals, Humans, and the Study of History by Dorothee Brantz
New
Hardback
University of Virginia Press
2010-08-30
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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