Where the Wild Things Are Now: Domestication Reconsidered

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Routledge, 12 июл. 2020 г. - Всего страниц: 326
Domestication has often seemed a matter of the distant past, a series of distinct events involving humans and other species that took place long ago. Today, as genetic manipulation continues to break new barriers in scientific and medical research, we appear to be entering an age of biological control. Are we also writing a new chapter in the history of domestication? Where the Wild Things Are Now explores the relevance of domestication for anthropologists and scholars in related fields who are concerned with understanding ongoing change in processes affecting humans as well as other species. From the pet food industry and its critics to salmon farming in Tasmania, the protection of endangered species in Vietnam and the pigeon fanciers who influenced Darwin, Where the Wild Things Are Now provides an urgently needed re-examination of the concept of domestication against the shifting background of relationships between humans, animals and plants.

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Acknowledgements
The Domestication of Anthropology
The Generosity of Domestication
Selection and the Unforeseen Consequences of Domestication
Agriculture or Architecture? The Beginnings of Domestication
The Wild the Captive and the
Darwin and the Domestication
The Metaphor of Domestication in Genetics
Atlantic Salmon Farming in Tasmania
Domestication and the Taming of the Wild
The Politics of Wild and Domesticated
Feeding the Animals
Index
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Molly Mullin is Associate Professor of Anthropology, Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Albion College, USA. Rebecca Cassidy is Lecturer in Anthropology, Department of Anthropology, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK.

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