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Animaux de compagnie : animaux de compagnie et changement social au XVIIIe siècle en Grande-Bretagne

by Tague, Ingrid H. | HC | Good
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Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, ... En savoir plusà propos de l'état
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Numéro de l'objet eBay :145742957144
Dernière mise à jour le 08 juin 2024 20:12:53 CEST. Afficher toutes les modificationsAfficher toutes les modifications

Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Bon état
Livre ayant déjà été lu, mais qui est toujours en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages mineurs, comme des éraflures, mais n'est ni trouée ni déchirée. Pour les couvertures rigides, la jaquette n'est pas nécessairement incluse. La reliure présente des marques d'usure mineures. La majorité des pages sont intactes. Pliures et déchirures mineures. Soulignement de texte mineur au crayon. Aucun surlignement de texte. Aucune note dans les marges. Aucune page manquante. Consulter l'annonce du vendeur pour avoir plus de détails et voir la description des défauts. Afficher toutes les définitions des étatsla page s'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre ou un nouvel onglet
Commentaires du vendeur
“Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, ...
Binding
Hardcover
Weight
1 lbs
Product Group
Book
IsTextBook
No
ISBN
9780271065885
Subject Area
Nature, Pets, History, Social Science
Publication Name
Animal Companions : Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Item Length
9.3 in
Publisher
Pennsylvania STATE University Press
Subject
Sociology / General, Europe / Western, General, Animals / General, Europe / Great Britain / General, Europe / General, Essays & Narratives
Publication Year
2015
Series
Animalibus Ser.: of Animals and Cultures
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1 in
Author
Ingrid H. Tague
Item Width
6.3 in
Item Weight
21.7 Oz
Number of Pages
320 Pages

À propos de ce produit

Product Information

Explores how thinking about pets in eighteenth-century Britain reflected and influenced the great social and cultural debates of the day, including struggles over gender, race, class, and national identity.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Pennsylvania STATE University Press
ISBN-10
0271065885
ISBN-13
9780271065885
eBay Product ID (ePID)
208587455

Product Key Features

Author
Ingrid H. Tague
Publication Name
Animal Companions : Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Subject
Sociology / General, Europe / Western, General, Animals / General, Europe / Great Britain / General, Europe / General, Essays & Narratives
Publication Year
2015
Series
Animalibus Ser.: of Animals and Cultures
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Nature, Pets, History, Social Science
Number of Pages
320 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.3 in
Item Height
1 in
Item Width
6.3 in
Item Weight
21.7 Oz

Additional Product Features

LCCN
2014-041903
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Series Volume Number
6
Lc Classification Number
Sf411.36.G7t34 2015
Reviews
"Ingrid Tague's study contributes to the animalizing of social history since the Enlightenment. During the eighteenth century, global commerce, slavery, and empire made pet keeping newly possible for many people on both sides of the Atlantic. At the same time, Enlightenment ideas and the rise of commercial and consumer society fuelled new desires for the companionship of domestic animals. Pets ceased to be marginal and became central. Analyzing the entanglements of pets with class, gender, and slavery, but also fashion, frivolity, and property, Tague illuminates how eighteenth-century Britons and their colonial counterparts had recourse to animals for thinking through the most searching questions of their time." --Donna Landry,University of Kent, "Ingrid Tague's well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain, the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest." --Matthew Senior, Oberlin College, "Ingrid Tague's well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain , the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest." --Matthew Senior, Oberlin College, "Ingrid Tague's well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain, the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest." -Matthew Senior, Oberlin College, "It would surprise many in our pet-centered world to know that keeping pets was once considered a highly suspect practice, a wasteful, sinful overvaluing of animals that threatened individual and national character. Ingrid Tague's history of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England illustrates how it evolved, by century's end, into a broadly accepted, even 'natural' part of everyday human life. Populated by memorable characters, both human and animal, and characterized by admirable scholarship and insightful analysis, this wide-ranging and densely detailed historical study investigates how pets functioned as important vehicles in some of the most vexed debates of the day concerning consumption, fashion, morality, sensibility, slavery, gender, and social class." --Karen Raber, University of Mississippi, "Ingrid Tague's well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain , the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest." --Matthew Senior,Oberlin College, "Ingrid Tague's study contributes to the animalizing of social history since the Enlightenment. During the eighteenth century, global commerce, slavery, and empire made pet keeping newly possible for many people on both sides of the Atlantic. At the same time, Enlightenment ideas and the rise of commercial and consumer society fuelled new desires for the companionship of domestic animals. Pets ceased to be marginal and became central. Analyzing the entanglements of pets with class, gender, and slavery, but also fashion, frivolity, and property, Tague illuminates how eighteenth-century Britons and their colonial counterparts had recourse to animals for thinking through the most searching questions of their time." --Donna Landry, University of Kent, "Thanks to animal studies, the difference between 'animal' and 'human' is neither stable nor certain. Tague approaches this hierarchy from the human end of the spectrum, finding touching and significant ways in which human pet owners reified or challenged the animal-human relationship in the eighteenth century as pet keeping evolved from a proscribed to an approved cultural practice." --Ann-Janine Morey American Historical Review, &"Ingrid Tague&'s well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain, the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest.&" &-Matthew Senior, Oberlin College, &"Ingrid Tague&'s Animal Companions helps us understand the extraordinary innovation entailed in the rise of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England. Tague shows how, rather suddenly, the widespread acceptance of relationships of intimacy between human and nonhuman animals shaped political, social, and intellectual views and debates. The rise of pet keeping brought abstract Enlightenment questions into the realm of concrete debate&-around the nature of the human, the concepts of ownership and slavery, relationships of affection and alterity, and the exercise of humanitarianism and the ideal of harmony. Tague&'s book gives us new insights into the role of human-animal relationships in defining key questions about the human.&" &-Laura Brown, Cornell University, &"It would surprise many in our pet-centered world to know that keeping pets was once considered a highly suspect practice, a wasteful, sinful overvaluing of animals that threatened individual and national character. Ingrid Tague&'s history of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England illustrates how it evolved, by century&'s end, into a broadly accepted, even 'natural&' part of everyday human life. Populated by memorable characters, both human and animal, and characterized by admirable scholarship and insightful analysis, this wide-ranging and densely detailed historical study investigates how pets functioned as important vehicles in some of the most vexed debates of the day concerning consumption, fashion, morality, sensibility, slavery, gender, and social class.&" &-Karen Raber, University of Mississippi, "It would surprise many in our pet-centered world to know that keeping pets was once considered a highly suspect practice, a wasteful, sinful overvaluing of animals that threatened individual and national character. Ingrid Tague's history of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England illustrates how it evolved, by century's end, into a broadly accepted, even 'natural' part of everyday human life. Populated by memorable characters, both human and animal, and characterized by admirable scholarship and insightful analysis, this wide-ranging and densely detailed historical study investigates how pets functioned as important vehicles in some of the most vexed debates of the day concerning consumption, fashion, morality, sensibility, slavery, gender, and social class." --Karen Raber,University of Mississippi, "Thanks to animal studies, the difference between 'animal' and 'human' is neither stable nor certain. Tague approaches this hierarchy from the human end of the spectrum, finding touching and significant ways in which human pet owners reified or challenged the animal-human relationship in the eighteenth century as pet keeping evolved from a proscribed to an approved cultural practice." --Ann-Janine Morey, American Historical Review, "Ingrid Tague's study contributes to the animalizing of social history since the Enlightenment. During the eighteenth century, global commerce, slavery, and empire made pet keeping newly possible for many people on both sides of the Atlantic. At the same time, Enlightenment ideas and the rise of commercial and consumer society fuelled new desires for the companionship of domestic animals. Pets ceased to be marginal and became central. Analyzing the entanglements of pets with class, gender, and slavery, but also fashion, frivolity, and property, Tague illuminates how eighteenth-century Britons and their colonial counterparts had recourse to animals for thinking through the most searching questions of their time." -Donna Landry, University of Kent, "Ingrid Tague's Animal Companions helps us understand the extraordinary innovation entailed in the rise of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England. Tague shows how, rather suddenly, the widespread acceptance of relationships of intimacy between human and nonhuman animals shaped political, social, and intellectual views and debates. The rise of pet keeping brought abstract Enlightenment questions into the realm of concrete debate-around the nature of the human, the concepts of ownership and slavery, relationships of affection and alterity, and the exercise of humanitarianism and the ideal of harmony. Tague's book gives us new insights into the role of human-animal relationships in defining key questions about the human." -Laura Brown, Cornell University, "Ingrid Tague's Animal Companions helps us understand the extraordinary innovation entailed in the rise of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England. Tague shows how, rather suddenly, the widespread acceptance of relationships of intimacy between human and nonhuman animals shaped political, social, and intellectual views and debates. The rise of pet keeping brought abstract Enlightenment questions into the realm of concrete debate--around the nature of the human, the concepts of ownership and slavery, relationships of affection and alterity, and the exercise of humanitarianism and the ideal of harmony. Tague's book gives us new insights into the role of human-animal relationships in defining key questions about the human." --Laura Brown, Cornell University, "Ingrid Tague's Animal Companions helps us understand the extraordinary innovation entailed in the rise of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England. Tague shows how, rather suddenly, the widespread acceptance of relationships of intimacy between human and nonhuman animals shaped political, social, and intellectual views and debates. The rise of pet keeping brought abstract Enlightenment questions into the realm of concrete debate--around the nature of the human, the concepts of ownership and slavery, relationships of affection and alterity, and the exercise of humanitarianism and the ideal of harmony. Tague's book gives us new insights into the role of human-animal relationships in defining key questions about the human." --Laura Brown,Cornell University, &"Ingrid Tague&'s study contributes to the animalizing of social history since the Enlightenment. During the eighteenth century, global commerce, slavery, and empire made pet keeping newly possible for many people on both sides of the Atlantic. At the same time, Enlightenment ideas and the rise of commercial and consumer society fuelled new desires for the companionship of domestic animals. Pets ceased to be marginal and became central. Analyzing the entanglements of pets with class, gender, and slavery, but also fashion, frivolity, and property, Tague illuminates how eighteenth-century Britons and their colonial counterparts had recourse to animals for thinking through the most searching questions of their time.&" &-Donna Landry, University of Kent, "It would surprise many in our pet-centered world to know that keeping pets was once considered a highly suspect practice, a wasteful, sinful overvaluing of animals that threatened individual and national character. Ingrid Tague's history of pet keeping in eighteenth-century England illustrates how it evolved, by century's end, into a broadly accepted, even 'natural' part of everyday human life. Populated by memorable characters, both human and animal, and characterized by admirable scholarship and insightful analysis, this wide-ranging and densely detailed historical study investigates how pets functioned as important vehicles in some of the most vexed debates of the day concerning consumption, fashion, morality, sensibility, slavery, gender, and social class." -Karen Raber, University of Mississippi, "Thanks to animal studies, the difference between 'animal' and 'human' is neither stable nor certain. Tague approaches this hierarchy from the human end of the spectrum, finding touching and significant ways in which human pet owners reified or challenged the animal-human relationship in the eighteenth century as pet keeping evolved from a proscribed to an approved cultural practice." -Ann-Janine Morey, American Historical Review, "Ingrid Tague's well-documented and clearly written Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain , the first systematic treatment of pet keeping in Enlightenment Britain, traces the evolution of affection toward domestic animals from the beginning of the century, when pet keeping was stigmatized as a waste of human resources and feelings, to the end of the period, when compassion for animals was seen as a necessary sign of genuine humanness. The discussion of the relation between pet keeping and racial theory during the Enlightenment is of particular interest." -Matthew Senior, Oberlin College
Table of Content
Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. The Material Conditions of Pet Keeping 2. Domesticating the Exotic 3. Fashioning the Pet 4. A Privilege or a Right? 5. Pets and Their People Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index
Copyright Date
2015
Dewey Decimal
636.088/70941
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes

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