ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Animal-Human History provides an up-to-date guide for the historian working within the growing field of animal-human history. Giving a sense of the diversity and interdisciplinary nature of the field, cutting-edge contributions explore the practices of and challenges posed by historical studies of animals and animal-human relationships.

Divided into three parts, the Companion takes both a theoretical and practical approach to a field that is emerging as a prominent area of study. Animals and the Practice of History considers established practices of history, such as political history, public history and cultural memory, and how animal-human history can contribute to them. Problems and Paradigms identifies key historiographical issues to the field with contributors considering the challenges posed by topics such as agency, literature, art and emotional attachment. The final section, Themes and Provocations, looks at larger themes within the history of animal-human relationships in more depth, with contributions covering topics that include breeding, war, hunting and eating.

As it is increasingly recognised that nonhuman actors have contributed to the making of history, The Routledge Companion to Animal-Human History provides a timely and important contribution to the scholarship on animal-human history and surrounding debates.

part |27 pages

Introduction

part I|165 pages

Animals and the practice of history

chapter 2|22 pages

The other citizens

Nationalism and animals

chapter 4|24 pages

Public history and heritage

A fruitful approach for privileging animals?

chapter 6|26 pages

The experimental animal

In search of a moral ecology of science?

chapter 8|23 pages

Animal matter in museums

Exemplifying materiality 1

part II|196 pages

Problems and paradigms

chapter 9|25 pages

Animals, agency, and history

chapter 11|22 pages

‘And has not art promoted our work also?’

Visual culture in animal–human history

chapter 12|25 pages

When adam and eve were monkeys

Anthropomorphism, zoomorphism, and other ways of looking at animals 1

chapter 13|24 pages

Exhibiting animals

Zoos, menageries and circuses

chapter 14|23 pages

Topologies of Tenderness and Violence

Human–animal relations in Georgian England

chapter 16|23 pages

Surviving twentieth-century modernity

Birdsong and emotions in Britain 1

part III|128 pages

Themes and provocations

chapter 18|24 pages

Animals in and at war

chapter 19|28 pages

Hunting and animal–human history

chapter 20|25 pages

Eating Animals

chapter 21|20 pages

Animals and violence

Medieval humanism, ‘medieval brutality’, and the carnivorous vegetarianism of Margery Kempe

part |26 pages

Conclusions

chapter 22|21 pages

The triumph of animal history?

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue