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The Animal/Human Boundary: Historical Perspectives
Edited by Angela N. H. Creager
Edited by William Chester Jordan


The way in which humans articulate identities, social hierarchies, and their inversions through relations with animals has been a fruitful topic in anthropological and historical investigations for the last several years. The contributors to this volume call attention to the symbolic meanings of animals, from the casting of first-year students as goats in medieval universities to the representation of vermin as greedy thieves in early modern England. But the essays in this volume are also concerned with the more material and bodily aspects of animal-human relations, like eating regulations, aggression, and transplanting of animal organs into human beings (xenotransplantation). Modern biologists have increasingly problematized the human-animal boundary. Researchers have challenged the supposedly unique ability of humans to use language. Chimpanzees and gorillas, it has been argued, have learned to communicate using American Sign Language. In addition, some scientists regard the sophistication of modes of communication in species like dolphins and songbirds as undermining the view of humans as uniquely capable of complex expressions. As studies of nonhuman primates threaten to compromise the long-held assumption that only humans possess self-awareness. The question becomes: How can one firmly differentiate human beings from other animals? Contributors include Piers Beirne, Richard W. Burkhardt, Jr., Mary E. Fissell, Paul H. Freedman, Ruth Mazo Karras, Susan E. Lederer, Rob Meens, John H. Murrin, James A. Serpell, and H. Peter Steeves. Angela N. H. Creager and William Chester Jordan are associates of the Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies, Princeton University.

 

DETAILS

25 b/w illustrations
360 pages
Size: 9 x 6 in
13 digit ISBN: 9781580461207
Binding: Hardback
First published: 16/Dec/2002
Last reprinted: 16/Dec/2002
Price: 75.00 USD / 40.00 GBP Imprint: University of Rochester Press
Series: Studies in Comparative History
Subject: Modern History

BIC class: AVH

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 05/01/2009
 
Contents
1   Eating Animals in the Early Middle Ages: Classifying the Animal World and Building Group Ideentities Rob Meens
2   The Representation of Medieval Peasants as Bestial and as Human Paul Freedman
3   Separating the Men from the Goats: Masculinity, Civilization, and Identity Formation in the Medieval University Ruth Mazo Karras
4   Imagining Vermin in Early Modern England Mary E. Fissell
5   "Things Fearful to Name": Bestiality in Early America John M. Murrin
6   Guardian Spirits or Demonic Pets: The Concept of the Witch's Familiar in Early Modern England, 1530-1712. James A. Serpell
7   On the Sexual Assault of Animals: A Sociological View Piers Beirne
8   The Familiar Other and Feral Selves: Life at the Human/Animal Boundary H. Peter Steeves
9   The Founders of Ethology and the Problem of Human Aggression: A Study in Ethology's Ecologies Richard W. Burkhardt Jr.
10   Animal Parts/Human Bodies: Organic Transplantation in Early Twentieth-Century America Susan E. Lederer
 

Reviews
The Animal/Human Boundary will stand as a model for how research from different historical perspectives can be brought together in a coherent, valuable whole. ANTHROZOOS 2004


 

 

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