The everyday lives of many farm workers in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century England were intricately and often intimately bound with the lives of animals, the ebb and flow of human life being inseparable from that of animal life. Farmyards, fields, folds as well as barns and stables were all spaces where animals transcended being the mere instruments of capital to instead being obvious co-constituents of the rhythms of existence. Living and working in such close proximity meant that the ‘species barrier’ was crossed and intimacies developed in everyday agricultural practices. Still, the relationship was based upon, if not reducible to, the workings of capital: the animal enrolled as a form of embodied capital, the labourer engaged b...
In the past, animals and their products were prominent features of urban life. How people utilised t...
This paper outlines some of the major theoretical contributions of the specialty field known as ‘ani...
This paper uses Bourdieu’s (1977) concept of habitus to examine human-animal relationships within ca...
The daily lives of many rural workers were intertwined with animals: those they kept, those in the w...
European culture in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries witnessed a radical redefinition of ‘hu...
In 1822 the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed The Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act, which today i...
Eighteenth-century English writers imagined domestication as the education of animals, as a mutually...
Confronting Animal Abuse presents a powerful examination of the human-animal relationship and the la...
The emergence of the public abattoir in 19th century Europe brought about a radical shift in animal ...
This chapter offers an overview of understandings of the relations between farmers or farm workers a...
This article is both a work of historical reconstruction and a theoretical intervention. It looks at...
Though not often acknowledged openly, killing represents by far the most common form of human intera...
The societal reaction to a series of horse assaults in rural Hampshire during the 1990s was a rare e...
Despite growing academic interest in the human–animal relationship, little research has been directe...
farming is demeaning to both humans and animals alike. The Secretary of the Farm and Food Society lo...
In the past, animals and their products were prominent features of urban life. How people utilised t...
This paper outlines some of the major theoretical contributions of the specialty field known as ‘ani...
This paper uses Bourdieu’s (1977) concept of habitus to examine human-animal relationships within ca...
The daily lives of many rural workers were intertwined with animals: those they kept, those in the w...
European culture in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries witnessed a radical redefinition of ‘hu...
In 1822 the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed The Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act, which today i...
Eighteenth-century English writers imagined domestication as the education of animals, as a mutually...
Confronting Animal Abuse presents a powerful examination of the human-animal relationship and the la...
The emergence of the public abattoir in 19th century Europe brought about a radical shift in animal ...
This chapter offers an overview of understandings of the relations between farmers or farm workers a...
This article is both a work of historical reconstruction and a theoretical intervention. It looks at...
Though not often acknowledged openly, killing represents by far the most common form of human intera...
The societal reaction to a series of horse assaults in rural Hampshire during the 1990s was a rare e...
Despite growing academic interest in the human–animal relationship, little research has been directe...
farming is demeaning to both humans and animals alike. The Secretary of the Farm and Food Society lo...
In the past, animals and their products were prominent features of urban life. How people utilised t...
This paper outlines some of the major theoretical contributions of the specialty field known as ‘ani...
This paper uses Bourdieu’s (1977) concept of habitus to examine human-animal relationships within ca...