Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

Subscribe to Read | $0.00

Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!

Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

  • Download on iOS
  • Download on Android
  • Download on iOS

American Beasts: Perspectives on Animals, Animality and U.S. Culture, 1776–1920

American Beasts: Perspectives on Animals, Animality and U.S. Culture, 1776–1920

Dominik Ohrem
0/5 ( ratings)
In American history, animals are everywhere. They are a ubiquitous presence in myriad historical, literary, biographical, scientific, and other documents and narratives of the American past – a past that, just like the present, was shaped by a multiplicity of relations between humans and other creatures ranging from coexistence and conviviality to hostility, subjugation, and extermination. While such quintessentially American species as the bison, the mustang, or the grizzly continue to roam the discursive, imaginary, and, now to a much lesser degree, the geographical spaces of the nation, the less iconic creatures of civilization – the various species of domesticated working and companion animals – have arguably played an even more critical role in the genesis of modern American culture and society throughout the ‘long nineteenth century.’
Until recently, however, despite their ubiquity in historical documents, social relations, and cultural productions, animals have rarely been of serious interest to mainstream historians. American Beasts argues that an adequate understanding of American history, and indeed of ‘human’ history more broadly, requires a sustained engagement with its multifaceted more-than-human dimensions.
The contributions collected here offer various insights into the broad relevance of animality and human-animal relations – from the culture of pet-keeping and the role of animals and animality in the context of slavery and abolition to the emergence of animal athletes at the turn of the twentieth century – as aspects that have always influenced all areas of American society. In addition, by highlighting the ways in which human-animal relations crucially shaped the relations between different groups of humans, American Beasts shows that a stronger concern with animals and animality also allows us to address the complex intersections between the history of human-animal relations and the histories of race, class, and gender in the United States in the time from the early national period to the Progressive Era.
With contributions by Roman Bartosch, Keridiana Chez, Brigitte Fielder, Katherine C. Grier, Andrew Howe, Michael Malay, Neill Matheson, Dominik Ohrem, Olaf Stieglitz, and Aimee Swenson.
Language
English
Format
Kindle Edition

American Beasts: Perspectives on Animals, Animality and U.S. Culture, 1776–1920

Dominik Ohrem
0/5 ( ratings)
In American history, animals are everywhere. They are a ubiquitous presence in myriad historical, literary, biographical, scientific, and other documents and narratives of the American past – a past that, just like the present, was shaped by a multiplicity of relations between humans and other creatures ranging from coexistence and conviviality to hostility, subjugation, and extermination. While such quintessentially American species as the bison, the mustang, or the grizzly continue to roam the discursive, imaginary, and, now to a much lesser degree, the geographical spaces of the nation, the less iconic creatures of civilization – the various species of domesticated working and companion animals – have arguably played an even more critical role in the genesis of modern American culture and society throughout the ‘long nineteenth century.’
Until recently, however, despite their ubiquity in historical documents, social relations, and cultural productions, animals have rarely been of serious interest to mainstream historians. American Beasts argues that an adequate understanding of American history, and indeed of ‘human’ history more broadly, requires a sustained engagement with its multifaceted more-than-human dimensions.
The contributions collected here offer various insights into the broad relevance of animality and human-animal relations – from the culture of pet-keeping and the role of animals and animality in the context of slavery and abolition to the emergence of animal athletes at the turn of the twentieth century – as aspects that have always influenced all areas of American society. In addition, by highlighting the ways in which human-animal relations crucially shaped the relations between different groups of humans, American Beasts shows that a stronger concern with animals and animality also allows us to address the complex intersections between the history of human-animal relations and the histories of race, class, and gender in the United States in the time from the early national period to the Progressive Era.
With contributions by Roman Bartosch, Keridiana Chez, Brigitte Fielder, Katherine C. Grier, Andrew Howe, Michael Malay, Neill Matheson, Dominik Ohrem, Olaf Stieglitz, and Aimee Swenson.
Language
English
Format
Kindle Edition

Rate this book!

Write a review?

loader