Traces of the Animal Past : : Methodological Challenges in Animal History / / edited by Jennifer Bonnell and Sean Kheraj.

Understanding the relationships between humans and animals is essential to a full understanding of both our present and our shared past. Across the humanities and social sciences, researchers have embraced the ‘animal turn,’ a multispecies approach to scholarship, with historians at the forefront of...

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Superior document:Canadian History and Environment Series
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Calgary, Alberta : : University of Calgary Press,, [2022]
©2022
Year of Publication:2022
Edition:First edition.
Language:English
Series:Canadian history and environment series.
Physical Description:1 online resource (430 pages)
Notes:Includes index.
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505 0 |a Front Cover -- Half Title Page -- Series Page -- Full Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction: Traces of the Animal Past -- PART I: Embodied Histories -- 1 | Kicking over the Traces?Freeing the Animal from the Archive -- 2 | Occupational Hazards: Honeybee Labour as an Interpretive Device in Animal History -- 3 | Hearing History through Hoofbeats: Exploring Equine Volition and Voice in the Archive -- PART II:Traces -- 4 | Who is a Greyhound?Reflections on the Non-Human Digital Archive -- 5 | Accessing Animal Health Knowledge: Popular Educators and Veterinary Science in Rural Ontario -- 6 | Animal Cruelty, Metaphoric Narrative, and the Hudson's Bay Company, 1919-1939 -- PART III:The Unknowable Animal -- 7 | Vanishing Flies and the Lady Entomologist -- 8 | Guinea Pig Agnotology -- 9 | Tuffy's Cold War: Science, Memory, and the US Navy's Dolphin -- 10 | The Elephant in the Archive -- PART IV: Spatial Sources and Animal Movement -- 11 | Making Tracks: A Grizzly and Entangled History -- 12 | Spatial Analysis and Digital Urban Animal History -- 13 | Visualizing the Animal City: Digital Experiments in Animal History -- 14 | What's a Guanaco? Tracing the Llama Diaspora through and beyond South America -- PART V: Looking at Animals -- 15 | Hidden in Plain Sight: How Art and Visual Culture Can Help Us Think about Animal Histories -- 16 | Creatures on Display: Making an Animal Exhibitat the Archives of Ontario -- 17 | Portraits of Extinction: Encountering Bluebuck Narratives in the Natural History Museum -- Epilogue: Combinations and Conjunction -- Contributors -- Index -- Back Cover. 
520 |a Understanding the relationships between humans and animals is essential to a full understanding of both our present and our shared past. Across the humanities and social sciences, researchers have embraced the ‘animal turn,’ a multispecies approach to scholarship, with historians at the forefront of new research in human-animal studies that blends traditional research methods with interdisciplinary theoretical frameworks that decenter humans in historical narratives. These exciting approaches come with core methodological challenges for scholars seeking to better understand the past from non-anthropocentric perspectives. Whether in a large public archive, a small private collection, or the oral histories of living memories, stories of animals are mediated by the humans who have inscribed the records and organized archival collections. In oral histories, the place of animals in the past are further refracted by the frailty of human memory and recollection. Only traces remain for researchers to read and interpret. Bringing together seventeen original essays by a leading group of international scholars, Traces of the Animal Past showcases the innovative methods historians use to unearth and explain how animals fit into our collective histories. Situating the historian within the narrative, bringing transparency to methodological processes, and reflecting on the processes and procedures of current research, this book presents new approaches and new directions for a maturing field of historical inquiry. 
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650 0 |a Human-animal relationships. 
700 1 |a Bonnell, Jennifer,  |d 1971-  |e editor. 
700 1 |a Kheraj, Sean,  |e editor. 
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