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Origin of the Hydroid Family Corymorphidae Origin of the Hydroid Family Corymorphidae
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The Tame and the Wild: People and Animals after 1492

by Norton, M.A.

Forthcoming
  • Paperback £24.95
  • New Book Availability : Not yet published
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  • Catalogue No : 63949
  • ISBN : 9780674303546
  • Published : MAR 2026
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 448

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Description:

A dramatic new interpretation of the encounter between Europe and the Americas reveals the crucial role of animals in the shaping of the modern world.

When the first European colonisers arrived in the Americas, they were utterly dependent on the dogs and horses that assisted them in military campaigns, as well as the livestock that provided them with food and labour. These settlers were convinced that their use of domesticated animals made them superior to Indigenous peoples, who did not practice livestock agriculture. In this book however, Marcy Norton shows that Indigenous ways of relating to animals were as sophisticated - and consequential - as those developed by other peoples across the Atlantic.

Like Europeans, Indigenous people throughout the Caribbean, Amazonia, and Mexico hunted wild animals. Yet, instead of raising domesticated livestock, Indigenous communities engaged in familiarisation: they captured and tamed wild animals - from monkeys and parrots to sloths and manatees - whom they made into kin. Familiarisation not only affected Indigenous responses to the invasions but also shaped European culture by influencing natural sciences and the emergence of the modern pet.

A sweeping history of human-animal relationships in the centuries after 1492, This book explains the origins of a contemporary paradox: the fact that humans continue to create enormous suffering for some animals while enjoying companionship with others.

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