Humans Animals and U.S. Society in the Long Nineteenth Century: A Documentary History
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<p>Volume IV comprises two sections dealing respectively with the development of pet culture and its evolution as a cultural institution over the course of the long nineteenth century and with the variegated presence of domesticated (and feralised) animals in U.S. cities. Closely tied to the antebellum rise of the American middle-class family and the sentimentalisation of (certain) human-animal relationships by the turn of the twentieth century American petkeeping had become the target of an expansive industry that offered everything from gourmet pet foods and fashionable accessories to healthcare and boarding services. This proliferation of companion animals also had a significant impact on urban life. Besides walking sitting or lying on sidewalks and being sold in city stores and on street corners in cases of abandonment the animals swelled an ever-increasing population of canine and feline strays. Together with horses pigs cows chicken and urban wildlife these animals fundamentally shaped the routines rhythms and general experience of nineteenth-century urban life for human city dwellers.</p>
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