ABSTRACT

This book examines the social world of the cat fancy, or the leisure activity of breeding and exhibiting pedigree cats. Based on multispecies ethnographic fieldwork and interviews in the United Kingdom, it explores the process and performance of exhibiting cats at shows, the breeding practices and discourses integral to the creation of pedigree breeds, and the relations that these practices generate between human guardians, the pedigree cat population, and non-pedigree cats. Through observation with cat fanciers and their interactions with their cats, the author investigates the social dynamics and relationships that form within the fancy, considering the interconnections between biopower and eugenics in pedigree breeding, the practices of pet keeping and the complexities of more-than-human care, and the implications of involvement for the cats themselves. As such, Cat People: Human–Cat Interrelatedness in the Cat Fancy will appeal to scholars from across the social sciences and humanities interested in human–animal interactions, multispecies leisure, anthrozoology, and more-than-human care.

chapter 1|35 pages

From Mouser to Catwalk

The Journey of the Domestic Cat

chapter 2|27 pages

On the Catwalk

Champion Cats

chapter 3|17 pages

Learning to Look at Cats

Enskilment, Aesthetics, and Feline Agency

chapter 4|39 pages

Shaping Cats

Breeding, Eugenics, and Biopower

chapter 5|27 pages

The Cat Fancy as Leisure and Work

chapter 6|26 pages

Love is Complicated

Cat Care Compromises within the Home

chapter 7|17 pages

A Dying Breed

The Perceived Decline of the Cat Fancy

chapter 8|6 pages

Conclusion