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Animals were everywhere in the early modern period and they
impacted, at least in some way, the lives of every kind of early
modern person, from the humblest peasant to the greatest prince.
Artists made careers based on depicting them. English gentry
impoverished themselves spending money on them. Humanists exercised
their scholarship writing about them. Pastors saved souls
delivering sermons on them. Nobles forged alliances competing with
them. Foreigners and indigenes negotiated with one another through
trading them. The nexus between animal-human relationships and
early modern identity is illuminated in this volume by the latest
research of international scholars working on the history of art,
literature, and of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Germany,
France, England, Spain, and South Africa. Collectively, these
essays investigate how animals - horses, dogs, pigs, hogs, fish,
cattle, sheep, birds, rhinoceroses, even sea-monsters and other
creatures - served people in Europe, England, the Americas, and
Africa to defend, contest or transcend the boundaries of early
modern identities. Developments in the methodologies employed by
scholars to interrogate the past have opened up an intellectual and
discursive space for - and a concomitant recognition of - the study
of animals as a topic that significantly elucidates past and
present histories. Relevant to a considerable array of disciplines,
the study of animals also provides a means to surmount traditional
disciplinary boundaries through processes of dynamic interchange
and cross-fertilization.
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