ABSTRACT

Human-animal studies is an academic field that has grown exponentially over the past decade. It explores the whys, hows, and whats of human-animal relations: why animals are represented and configured in different ways in human cultures and societies around the world; how they are imagined, experienced, and given significance; what these relationships might signify about being human; and what about these relationships might be improved for the sake of the individuals as well as the communities concerned.

The Routledge Handbook of Human-Animal Studies presents a collection of original essays from artists and scholars who have established themselves internationally on the basis of specific and significant new contributions to human-animal studies.

This international, interdisciplinary handbook will be of interest to students and scholars of human-animal studies, sociology, anthropology, biology, environmental studies, geography, cultural studies, history, philosophy, media studies, gender studies, literature, psychology, ethology, and visual studies.

chapter |9 pages

In it together

An introduction to human-animal studies

chapter 1|13 pages

Mammoths in the landscape

chapter 2|16 pages

Domesticating practices

The case of Arabian babblers

chapter 3|15 pages

Escaping the maze

Wildness and tameness in studying animal behaviour

chapter 4|14 pages

Wherever I lay my cat?

Post-human crowding and the meaning of home

chapter 5|16 pages

On a wing and a prayer

Butterflies in contemporary art

chapter 6|13 pages

‘This ain't agriculture'

chapter 7|17 pages

Beyond the wild, the feral, and the domestic

Lessons from prehistoric Crete

chapter 8|10 pages

Netherworld envoy or man's best friend?

Attitudes toward dogs in the ancient world

chapter 10|15 pages

The adored and the abhorrent

Nationalism and feral cats in England and Australia

chapter 11|14 pages

Animal conceptions in animism and conservation

Their rootedness in distinct longue durée notions of life and death

chapter 12|14 pages

The emptiness of the wild

Philip Armstrong and Annie Potts

chapter 13|12 pages

Feral Attraction

Art, becoming, and erasure

chapter 14|14 pages

Becoming rhinoceros

Therio-theatricality as problem and promise in Western drama

chapter 15|12 pages

Bestial imaginings

chapter 16|13 pages

Embodying the feral

Indigenous traditions and the nonhuman in some recent South African novels

chapter 17|13 pages

Reconfiguring wild spaces

The porous boundaries of wild animal geographies

chapter 19|16 pages

Kinship imaginaries

Children's stories of wild friendships, fear, and freedom

chapter 20|15 pages

Mourning crows

Grief and extinction in a shared world 1

chapter 21|15 pages

Dead, dead, dead, dead, dead