Taking her 1982 book, Rodeo: An Anthropologist Looks at the Wild and the Tame, a step further, cultural anthropologist and practicing veterinarian Elizabeth Atwood Lawrence here concentrates on the universal appeal of the horse. Horses, she states, can be vivid images in human cognitive processes, and frequently serve as meaningful constructs in ordering social relations between people and the work around them (p. ix). She explores various facets of the human-horse relationship to discover the special appeal and significance of horses in diverse societies
Horses have played a large part in many cultures across the world, the Scandinavian Viking Age inclu...
Joan Burbick discusses the young women who promoted rodeos from the early 1920s until the 1990s. In ...
This project will add to and build upon the existing anthropological literature on human-animal rel...
Taking her 1982 book, Rodeo: An Anthropologist Looks at the Wild and the Tame, a step further, cultu...
Anthropologists have been slow to take up intensive fieldwork in American life, partly because their...
[Review] Kristen Guest and Monica Mattfield, editors. Equestrian Cultures: Horse, Humans, Human Soci...
From an anthropological perspective, this research aims to shed light on the relationship between th...
The reprinting of The Horse in Blackfoot Indian Culture makes it possible for a new generation of pl...
In this concluding chapter, we consider the aggregate significance of our volume. In relation to exp...
Representations about horses are widespread in our culture, however, there is not much literature f...
To my knowledge, there has been no organized synthesis describing the historical development of hors...
The thesis at hand investigates horse-riding in two novellas of the German Jahrhundertwende era: Hug...
A combination of myth and reality, the American West evokes images that feature the mustang as a cen...
This thesis asks how and why a serendipitous and spontaneous personal encounter with a being from an...
WOS:000252598500001International audienceDespite a long history of human-horse relationship, horse-r...
Horses have played a large part in many cultures across the world, the Scandinavian Viking Age inclu...
Joan Burbick discusses the young women who promoted rodeos from the early 1920s until the 1990s. In ...
This project will add to and build upon the existing anthropological literature on human-animal rel...
Taking her 1982 book, Rodeo: An Anthropologist Looks at the Wild and the Tame, a step further, cultu...
Anthropologists have been slow to take up intensive fieldwork in American life, partly because their...
[Review] Kristen Guest and Monica Mattfield, editors. Equestrian Cultures: Horse, Humans, Human Soci...
From an anthropological perspective, this research aims to shed light on the relationship between th...
The reprinting of The Horse in Blackfoot Indian Culture makes it possible for a new generation of pl...
In this concluding chapter, we consider the aggregate significance of our volume. In relation to exp...
Representations about horses are widespread in our culture, however, there is not much literature f...
To my knowledge, there has been no organized synthesis describing the historical development of hors...
The thesis at hand investigates horse-riding in two novellas of the German Jahrhundertwende era: Hug...
A combination of myth and reality, the American West evokes images that feature the mustang as a cen...
This thesis asks how and why a serendipitous and spontaneous personal encounter with a being from an...
WOS:000252598500001International audienceDespite a long history of human-horse relationship, horse-r...
Horses have played a large part in many cultures across the world, the Scandinavian Viking Age inclu...
Joan Burbick discusses the young women who promoted rodeos from the early 1920s until the 1990s. In ...
This project will add to and build upon the existing anthropological literature on human-animal rel...