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  1. "Fowle fowles"? The sacred pelican and the profane cormorant in early modern culture

    Contributor(s):: De Ornellas, Kevin

  2. "You Kill Things to Look at Them": animal death in contemporary art

    Contributor(s):: Baker, Steve, Animal Studies Group

  3. 'A pig is a person' or 'You can love a fox and hunt it': innovation and tradition in the discursive representation of animals

    Contributor(s):: Guy Cook

    In contemporary urban society animals have been erased in many people's lives (Stibbe 2012, 2014). They are generally encountered only as meat, pets, pests, or vicariously in fiction and documentaries; yet the relation of humans to other animals is a matter of pressing environmental, social,...

  4. 'Animals Are Their Best Advocates': Interspecies Relations, Embodied Actions, and Entangled Activism

    Full-text: Available

    | Contributor(s):: Gonzalo Villanueva

    Since 1986, the Coalition Against Duck Shooting (CADS) has sought to ban the practice of recreational duck hunting across Australia. Campaigners have developed techniques to disrupt shooters, rescue injured water birds, and gain media coverage. The campaign is underpinned by embodied processes...

  5. 'Bloodhounds as Detectives': Dogs, slum stench and late-Victorian investigation

    | Contributor(s):: Pemberton, Neil

  6. 'Flesh is the paradise of a man of flesh': cultural conflict over indian hunting beliefs and rituals in New France as recorded in The Jesuit Relations

    | Contributor(s):: Altherr, Thomas L.

  7. 'Maggots in their ears': hunting indications and indigenous knowledge in development

    | Contributor(s):: Sillitoe, Paul

  8. A cultural history of animals

    | Contributor(s):: Kalof, Linda, Pohl-Resl, Brigitte

    A Cultural History of Animals is a multi-volume project on the history of human-animal relations from ancient times to the present. The set of six volumes covers 4500 years of human-animal interaction.Volume 1: Antiquity to the Dark Ages (2500BC-1000AD)Volume 2: The Medieval Age (1000-1400)Volume...

  9. A reply to Helvenston and Hodgson, and Neely

    | Contributor(s):: Shipman, Pat

  10. A review of the relationship between indigenous Australians, dingoes ( Canis dingo ) and domestic dogs ( Canis familiaris )

    | Contributor(s):: Smith, B. P., Litchfield, C. A.

    Canids form a large part of Indigenous Australian life and mythology, an association first developed with the dingo, and later with the domestic dog. The relationship between canids and Indigenous Australians is intricate, but unique in that these peoples never domesticated the wild dingo....

  11. A spatially explicit model of the white-tailed deer population in Delaware

    | Contributor(s):: Jennings, Brian, Bowman, Jacob L., Tymkiw, Elizabeth L.

  12. A spectacle of beasts: hunting rituals and animal rights in early modern England

    | Contributor(s):: Bergman, Charles

  13. A statewide examination of hunting and trophy nonhuman animals: Perspectives of Montana hunters

    | Contributor(s):: Eliason, S. L.

  14. A view to a death in the morning : hunting and nature through history

    | Contributor(s):: Cartmill, Matt

  15. A wild web: The tangled history of attitudes toward wildlife in a dynamic New England culture, 1945--1985

    | Contributor(s):: Hopkins, Mary H.

  16. A zooarchaeology of modernizing human–animal relationships in Tornio, northern Finland, 1620–1800

    | Contributor(s):: Puputti, Anna-Kaisa

  17. Activities of the American public relating to animals

    | Contributor(s):: Kellert, Stephen R., Berry, Joyce K.

  18. Aggression and Hunting Attitudes

    | Contributor(s):: Wilson, M. S., Peden, E.

  19. Alternative Methods of Controlling Wildlife Populations

    | Contributor(s):: Lindsay Aspin, Chantel McDowell, Rebecca Rocha, Julie M. Fagan

    Every year New Jersey sets aside several days for a state-sponsored black bear hunt. We feel that this hunt is unnecessary, and that proper human behaviors will change black bear behavior, and ultimately decrease human-bear interactions. This way, humans are at peace, and bears are at peace, and...

  20. American Attitudes Toward and Knowledge of Animals: An Update

    | Contributor(s):: S.R. Kellert

    The distribution of a typology of basic attitudes toward animals in the American population is explored through personal interviews with 3,107 randomly selected persons in the 48 contiguous states and Alaska. Data is presented on the prevalence of these attitudes in the overall American...