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A Traitor to His Species - Henry Bergh and the Birth of the Animal Rights Movement (Hardcover)
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A Traitor to His Species - Henry Bergh and the Birth of the Animal Rights Movement (Hardcover)
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Gilded Age Americans lived cheek-by-jowl with free range animals.
Cities and towns teemed with milk cows in dark tenement alleys,
pigs rooting through garbage in the streets, geese and chickens
harried by the packs of stray dogs that roamed the 19th century
city. For all of American history, animals had been a ubiquitous
and seemingly inevitable part of urban life, essential to
sustaining a dense human population. As that population became
ever-denser, though, city dwellers were forced to consider new ways
to share space with their fellow creatures-and began to fit urban
animals into one of two categories: the pets they loved or the
pests they exterminated. Into the fracas of the urban landscape
stepped Henry Bergh, who launched a then-shocking campaign to bring
rights to animals. Bergh's movement was considered wildly radical
for suggesting that animals might feel pain, that they might have
rights. He and his cadre of activists put abusers on trial,
sometimes literally calling the animal victims as witnesses in
court. But despite all the showmanship, at its core the movement
was guided by a fierce sense of its devotees' morality. A Traitor
to His Species is a revelatory social history, bursting with
colorful characters. In addition to the eccentric and
droopily-mustachioed Bergh, the movement and its adversaries
included former Five Points
gang-leader-turned-sports-hall-entrepreneur Kit Burns and his prize
bulldog Belcher, larger-than-life impresario P.T. Barnum, and
pioneering Philadelphia activist Caroline Earle White. There are
greedy robber barons and humanitarian visionaries-all bumping up
against one another as the city underwent a monumental shift. For
better or worse, they all forged our modern relationship to
animals.
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