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* PSYETA Featured Title, September/October,
2003. Read our staff review! |
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Beyond
Animal Rights: A Feminist Caring Ethic for
the Treatment of Animals by Josephine
Donovan (Editor), Carol J. Adams (Editor) |
|
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Ecofeminism
: Women, Animals, Nature (Ethics and Action)
by Greta Claire Gaard (Editor)
Because ecofeminism
struggles to reveal the complex interconnected-ness
of all living things with the natural environment,
these essays were chosen from an assortment
of viewpoints. Activists, feminists, ecologists
and animal liberationists share their unique
experiences, efforts and ideas about the
relationships inherent in our world. This
collection of original writings examines
the historic norms of patriarchal concepts
about humanity and illuminates a new perspective
between humans and nature. --
from The WomanSource Catalog & Review:
Tools for Connecting the Community for Women;
review by SH |
| |
The
Animal Rights/Environmental Ethics Debate:
The Environmental Perspective (Suny Series
in Philosophy and Biology)
by
Eugene Hargrove (Editor) |
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Animal
Rites: Liturgies of Animal Care
by Andrew Linzey |
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Of
God and Pelicans: A Theology of Reverence
for Life
by Jay Byrd McDaniel |
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Animals
and Why They Matter
by Mary Midgley |
|
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Created
from Animals: The Moral Implications of
Darwinism
by
James Rachels
Created from Animals
offers a provocative look at how Darwinian
evolution undermines many tenets of traditional
philosophy and religion. Rachels begins
by examining Darwin's own life and work,
presenting an astonishingly vivid and compressed
biography. We see Darwin's studies of the
psychological links in evolution (such as
emotions in dogs, and the "mental powers"
of worms), and how he addressed the moral
implications of his work, especially in
his concern for the welfare of animals.
Rachels goes on to present a lively and
accessible survey of the controversies that
followed in Darwin's wake, ranging from
Herbert Spencer's Social Darwinism to Edward
O. Wilson's sociobiology, and discusses
how the work of such influential intellects
as Descartes, Hume, Kant, T.H. Huxley, Henri
Bergson, B.F. Skinner, and Stephen Jay Gould
has contributed to--or been overthrown by--evolutionary
science. |
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The
Case for Animal Rights
by
Tom Regan
|
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Animal
Liberation
by Peter Singer
Since
its original publication in 1975, this groundbreaking
work has awakened millions of concerned
men and women to the shocking abuse of animals
everywhere--inspiring a worldwide movement
to eliminate much of the cruel and unnecessary
laboratory animal experimentation of years
past. In this newly revised and expanded
edition, author Peter Singer exposes the
chilling realities of today's "factory forms"
and product-testing procedures--offering
sound, humane solutions to what has become
a profound environmental and social as well
as moral issue. An important and persuasive
appeal to conscience, fairness, decency
and justice, Animal Liberation
is essential reading for the supporter and
the skeptic alike. |
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Ethics
into Action: Henry Spira and the Animal
Rights Movement
by
Peter Singer
Very
economically, Ethics Into Action
renders a rich picture of a complex but
focused compatriot, complete with a "lessons
learned" section, including hints on how
to avoid bureaucracy and the pitfall of
dividing the world into "saints and sinners."
|
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The
Dreaded Comparison: Human and Animal Slavery
by Marjorie Spiegel
Spiegel's
book is a powerful and important statement
about oppression and violence in Western
culture. The author writes "To those who
would be master, what matters is not so
much who their slaves will be, but that
there are slaves to be had". This work is
accessible to all adult audiences, and would
be suitable for college courses at any level
in sociology, philosophy, or peace studies,
or examing issues of oppression in contemporary
animal issues. --Multicultural Review
|
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Rattling
the Cage:Toward Legal Rights for Animals
by
Steven M Wise
Nonhuman
animals are not "persons" in the legal sense
and therefore have no legal rights. Wise,
an animal rights activist and lawyer, argues
for the entitlement of animals to legal
rights in this scholarly new book. The parallels
drawn between legal arguments for human
rights and research showing that apes demonstrate
the same mental capacities as the human
persons make for a compelling argument against
the injustice of denying basic legal rights
to apes. This is a carefully reasoned and
well-written book. -- Booklist |
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Animals
and Women : Feminist Theoretical Explorations
by Carol J. Adams (Editor), Josephine Donovan
(Editor)
|
Animal
Abuse & Exploitation |
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Animals
in Film
by Jonathan Burt
* PSY
ETA Featured Title, April 2003.
Read
our staff review! |
 |
The
Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist Vegetarian
Critical Theory
by
Carol Adams
In
just over a year, the book with the strange
title--and even strager ideas, some would
say--has become the classic articulation
of the hidden connections between meat eating
and patriarchy, between vegetarianism and
feminism. Now in paperback and widely available
to readers everywhere, The Sexual Politics
of Meat will have an even larger impact
on the American public.
-- Ingram |
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Child
Abuse, Domestic Violence and Animal Abuse:
Linking the Circles of Compassion for Prevention
and Intervention
by
Frank Ascione and Phil Arkow (Editors)
Evidence
is mounting that animal abuse, frequently
embedded in families scarred by domestic
violence and child abuse and neglect, often
predicts the potential for other violent
acts. As early intervention is critical
in the prevention and reduction of aggression,
this book encourages researchers and professionals
to recognize animal abuse as a significant
problem and a human public-health issue
that should be included as a curriculum
topic in training. |
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A
View to a Death in the Morning: Hunting
and Nature Through History
by
Matt Cartmill
Biological
anthropologist Cartmill (Duke U.) searches
out the origins, and the strange allure,
of the myth of Man the Hunter, showing how
hunting has figured in the western imagination
from the myth of Artemis to the tale of
Bambi--and how its evolving image has reflected
humankind's view of itself. Accessible to
a general audience. Includes some b&w
illustrations. -- Annotation copyright Book
News, Inc. Portland, Or |
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Animal
Equality: Language and Liberation
by
Joan Dunayer
The
first book on language and nonhuman oppression--and
the most progressive animal-rights book
to date--Animal Equality shows that deceptive,
biased words sustain injustice toward nonhuman
animals. Speciesism (prejudice against nonhuman
animals) survives through lies. Animal Equality's
compelling evidence of nonhuman thought
and emotion debunks language that characterizes
other animals as unreasoning or insensitive.
Vivid descriptions of hunting, sportfishing,
zoos, aquaprisons, vivisection, and food-industry
captivity and slaughter reveal the cruelty
that misleading words legitimize and conceal.
Animal Equality also uncovers the speciesist
attitudes and practices underlying much
racist and sexist language. Every animal--nonhuman
or human--deserves equal consideration and
protection, Joan Dunayer argues. Offering
style, pronoun, and vocabulary guidelines,
Animal Equality proposes new language that
will bring us closer to nonhuman liberation.
|
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Slaughterhouse:
The Shocking Story of Greed, Neglect, and
Inhumane Treatment Inside the U.S. Meat
Industry
by Gail A. Eisnitz
With
powerful descriptions reminiscent of Upton
Sinclair's masterpiece The Jungle, this
book takes a shocking, frightening look
at where our beef, poultry, and pork are
mass-produced. Includes photos. --Ingram
|
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Lethal
Laws: Animal Testing, Human Health, and
Environmental Policy
by
Alix Fano
For
the last 150 years, chemicals have been
tested on animals for the alleged purpose
of protecting the public from their potentially
dangerous effects. In Lethal Laws, Alix
Fano argues that using animals as human
surrogates is not only unethical, but also
bad science. Fano provides a meticulous
analysis of the technical and scientific
problems that have plagued animal tests
for decades, but which have not been forcefully
challenged until now. |
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Sacred
Cows and Golden Geese: The Human Cost of
Experiments on Animals by C. Ray Greek,
MD and Jean Swingle Greek, DVM
The
Greeks aren't the first to point out the
bad science and high costs of experimentation
on animals. But they may be the first to
investigate the subject thoroughly and report
their findings in a well-written, well-documented,
and accessible book. They strive not so
much to help prevent harm to animals as
to prove that the results of animal experiments
usually aren't applicable to humans. Early
researchers are often credited for discoveries
because they worked on animals, whereas
clinicians who observed the same conditions
in their patients are overlooked. The Greeks
also report many cases in which animal experimentation
confused or held up work on humans. Human
cells and tissues, they say, can be used
in many more and much more pertinent experiments
than can those of animals. The lobby for
animal experimentation consists of breeders
and suppliers, equipment companies, drug
companies, universities, and grant-giving
groups, all of which exert great pressure
on the FDA and other government agencies.
A book to spur discussion and action. --
William Beatty -- Copyright ©
American Library Association. All rights
reserved |
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Cruelty
to Animals and Interpersonal Violence: Readings
in Research and Application
by Randall Lockwood and Frank R Ascione
(editors)
Cruelty
to Animals and Interpersonal Violence
presents in one volume historical, philosophical,
and research sources that explore the maltreatment
of animals and the ways people hurt each
other. Diverse disciplines are represented
among the readings, including psychology
and psychiatry, criminology, social work,
veterinary science, and anthropology. A
bibliography of related books and articles
is provided for readers who wish to pursue
this topic in greater detail. |
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In
the Name of Science: Issues in Responsible
Animal Experimentation
by
F. Barbara Orlans
Few
arguments in biomedical experimentation
have stirred such heated debate in recent
years as those raised by animal research.
In this comprehensive analysis of the social,
political, and ethical conflicts surrounding
the use of animals in scientific experiments,
Barbara Orlans judges both ends of the spectrum
in this debate -- unconditional approval
or rejection of animal experimentation --
to be untenable. Instead of arguing for
either view, she thoughtfully explores the
ground between the extremes, and convincingly
makes the case for public policy reforms
that serve to improve the welfare of laboratory
animals without jeopardizing scientific
endeavor. |
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Beyond
Beef: The Rise and Fall of the Cattle Culture
by
Jeremy Rifkin
An
analysis of the beef culture incorporates
anthropology, history, sociology, economics,
and ecology to demonstrate how "cattle culture"
has changed our world. --Ingram |
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Farm
Animal Welfare: School, Bioethical, and
Research Issues
by
Bernard E. Rollin
An
examination of current issues on the well-being
of farm animals, especially in the beef,
swine, dairy, veal, and poultry industries.
|
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Animal
Models of Human Psychology
by
Kenneth Shapiro, PhD
Animal
Models of Human Psychology contributes
to the debate on our treatment of nonhuman
animals in research by providing an empirical
method for evaluating the benefits of the
research and the costs to the animals. The
usual "costs-to-the animal vs. human-benefits"
arguments simply have not been based on
empirical findings. But they could be. By
offering additional science-based methods
of evaluation, the book attempts to make
the case against animal-based research stronger.
*
note: this title is available through PSY
ETA's own secure order page. Click
for more information about the title .
|
| |
|
Animal
Rights/Human Rights: Entanglements of Oppression
and Liberation
by
David Nibert
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
July, 2003 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Strolling
with Our Kin: Speaking for and Respecting
Voiceless Animals
by
Marc Bekoff
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
November, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Dominion:
The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals,
and the Call to Mercy by Matthew Scully
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
December, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Compassionate
Beasts: The Quest for Animal Rights
by Lyle Munro
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
October, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Drawing
the Line: Science and the Case for Animal
Rights
by
Steven M. Wise
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
July, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
The
Animal Question: Why Non-Human Animals Deserve
Human Rights
by
Paola Cavalieri
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
March, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Encyclopedia
of Animal Rights and Animal Welfare
by Marc Bekoff (Editor), Carron A. Meaney
(Editor)
From
the use of animals in experiments to develop
medicine for people, to the preservation
of endangered species in zoos, human beings'
responsibility to and for their fellow animals
has become an increasingly controversial
subject. This book, which Jane Goodall in
her foreword calls "unique, informative,
and exciting," provides a provocative overview
of the many different perspectives on the
issues of animal rights and animal welfare
in an easy-to-use encyclopedic format. Students,
teachers, and interested readers can explore
the ideas of well-known philosophers, biologists,
and psychologists in this field, such as
Peter Singer, Tom Regan, and over 125 others,
all of whom have contributed original entries.
|
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The
Great Ape Project: Equality Beyond Humanity
by Paola Cavalieri (Editor), Peter Singer
(Editor)
A
call for a more equitable treatment of apes,
chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans features
the passionate words of thirty-four world-renowned
figures, including Jane Goodall, Douglas
Adams, Jared Diamond, and Francine Patterson.
-- Ingram |
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Introduction
to Animal Rights: Your Child or the Dog?
by Gary Francione
Introduction
to Animal Rights: Your Child or the Dog?
provides a guidebook to examining
our social and personal ethical beliefs.
It takes us through concepts of property
and equal consideration to arrive at the
basic contention of animal rights: that
everyone—human and non-human—has
the right not to be treated as a means to
an end. Along the way, it illuminates concepts
and theories that all of us use but few
of us understand—the nature
of "rights" and "interests," for example,
and the theories of Locke, Descartes, and
Bentham. |
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Rain
Without Thunder: The Ideology of the Animal
Rights Movement
by
Gary Francione
In
legal theory, Francione notes, "Animal welfare,
unlike animal rights, rests on the notion
that animals are property and that virtually
every animal interest can be sacrificed
in order to obtain `benefits' for people."
Animal welfare is rather like "wise use"--i.e.,
eat animals, experiment on them, but try
to avoid "unnecessary" suffering. As Francione
says, "I do not think that we can meaningfully
speak of legal rights for animals as long
as animals are regarded as property." Francione
follows his 1995 book, Animals, Property
and the Law , with a scholarly, sometimes
dense but generally compelling argument
that the modern animal-rights movement is
substantially one for animal welfare that
ignores the question of whether animals
have inherent rights.
--Copyright 1996 Cahners Business Information,
Inc. |
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Political
Animals : Animal Protection Politics in Britain
and the United States by Robert Garner
|
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Hearts
and Minds: The Controversy over Laboratory
Animals
by Julian McAllister Groves
Illumination
of emotionally laden issues is typically
sought through "objective" research and
analysis. But for his study of animal-rights
activists and animal researchers in a small
Southern university town, Groves functioned
as a participant-observer. Furthermore,
he focused on people's feelings - how they
felt about the use of animals in research,
why they felt the way they did and how they
felt about their feelings. The results are
truly enlightening. He found that the opposing
camps are distinguished in unexpected ways:
animals-rights activists emphasize an ethic
of personal responsibility expressed in
rational, scientific terms, while researchers
emphasize their roles as caring stewards
of scientific research. These contrasting
orientations have their origins in a shared
acknowledgment of the moral costs of using
animals, and Groves argues that polarization
has resulted because people have not expressed
to one another the shame and guilt that
result from their moral ambivalence. --Copyright
1997 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
|
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Animal
Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain
since 1800
by Hilda Kean
The
struggle for the rights of wild, farmed
and domestic animals is not by any means
a recent phenomenon. Controversies around
the issues of vivisection, zoos, and hunting
all have a long history. Here Hilda Kean
traces these issues across a period of more
than 200 years, and also charts the history
of vegetarianism and continuing campaigns
against cruelty of animals. 40 illustrations.
--Ingram |
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The
Animal Rights Movement in America: From
Compassion to Respect
by
Lawrence Finsen, Susan Finsen
The
Finsens profile the various animal-rights
groups and their philosophies, goals, and
actions. They also provide a readable history
of the movement, from its beginning in early
philosophy to more concerted and organized
efforts in eighteenth-, nineteenth-, and
twentieth-century Britain and the U.S. They
treat in particular detail several of the
most active and influential animal-rights
organizations, including People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals and the Animal
Liberation Front. The Finsens also offer
a good analysis of books central to the
movement, including Singer's Animal Liberation
(1975) and Regan's Case for Animal Rights
(1983). Though the authors acknowledge their
bias in favor of animal rights, and that
bias is especially clear in
their discussions of groups and individuals
in disagreement with animal-rights advocates,
theirs remains an excellent primer on a
growing political movement. -- Brian McCombie
- Booklist |
Companion
Animals Benefits |
 |
Companion
Animals and Us: Exploring the Relationships
Between People and Pets
by
Anthony Podberscek, Elizabeth S. Paul, and
James A. Serpell (Editors)
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
September, 2002 . Read
our staff review! |
 |
Pet
Therapy: A Study and Resource Guide for
the Use of Companion Animals in Selected
Therapies, 8th Edition
by Phil Arkow
Animal-Assisted
Therapy (AAT) and Animal-Assisted Activities
(AAA) are becoming increasingly recognized
as programs that can enhance the welfare
of people and animals in a wide range of
settings. This 200-page resource guide,
now in its 8th edition, is the definitive
reference text about AAT and is used in
several college curricula. The first half
of the book explores the premise and promise
of AAT with guidelines for implementing
programs in such venues as nursing homes,
hospitals, hospices, prisons and AIDS/HIV
programs. Topics also include animal selection,
volunteer training, risk management, and
how to conduct an animal visit. The second
half of the book is an extensive Resource
Guide, including hundreds of citations of
AAT research, directories, regulations and
model policies.
*
Note: This title is not
available at Amazon.com. Please
contact the author directly to place
an order. |
 |
Between
Pets and People: The Importance of Animal
Companionship
by
Alan Beck and Aaron Katcher
A
review and exploration of the evidence that
animals have a significant influence on
human life and health. The authors, who
were the original investigators of well
known studies, show that physical and emotional
health can be improved with human-animal
interaction. The book reviews the evolution
of domestication and the basis for the importance
of companion animals in our lives. |
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Handbook
on Animal-Assisted Therapy: Theoretical
Foundations and Guidelines for Practice
by
Aubrey H. Fine (editor)
Fine,
of the school of education and integrative
studies at Cal State Polytechnic U., has
chosen contributions from veterinarians,
animal trainers, psychologists, social workers,
and others that build to an overview of
the ways animals can help improve the lives
of elderly, sick, and disabled people. The
work includes guidelines and best practices
for using dogs, cats, and other animals
as therapeutic companions with specific
populations (e.g., children, the disabled,
AIDS patients) and in various settings (hospitals,
prisons, independent practice). -- Book
News, Inc.®, Portland, OR |
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Bring
Me the Ocean: Nature as Teacher, Messenger
and Intermediary
by
Rebecca A. Reynolds
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
April 2002. Read
our staff review! |
| |
| |
You're
an Animal Viskovitz!
by
Alessandro Boffa
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
February, 2003 . Read
our guest review! |
|
|
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Animals
in Human Histories: The Mirror of Nature
and Culture
by
Mary Henninger-Voss (Ed.)
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
May 2003. Read
our staff review! |
 |
Regarding
Animals (Animals, Culture, and Society)
by Arnold Arluke, Clinton R. Sanders
(Contributor |
|
Picturing
the Beast : Animals, Identity and Representation
by
Steve Baker and Carol Adams
From
Mickey Mouse to the teddy bear, from the
Republican elephant to the use of "jackass"
as an all-purpose insult, images of animals
play a central role in politics, entertainment,
and social interactions. In this penetrating
look at how Western culture pictures the
beast, Steve Baker examines how such images--sometimes
affectionate, sometimes derogatory, always
distorting--affect how real animals are
perceived and treated.
Baker
provides an animated discussion of how animals
enter into the iconography of power through
wartime depictions of the enemy, political
cartoons, and sports symbolism. He examines
a phenomenon he calls the "disnification"
of animals, meaning a reduction of the animal
to the trivial and stupid, and shows how
books featuring talking animals underscore
human superiority. He also discusses how
his findings might inform the strategies
of animal rights advocates seeking to call
public attention to animal suffering and
abuse. Until animals are extricated from
the baggage of imposed images, Baker maintains,
neither they nor their predicaments can
be clearly seen. |
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Animals
and Modern Culture: A Sociology of Human-Animal
Relations in Modernity
by Adrian Franklin |
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Pets
and People: The Psychology of Pet Ownership
by Barrie Gunter |
|
A
Sand County Almanac
by
Aldo Leopold
Leopold's
principal and extraordinary contribution
to our world was to articulate the idea
of a land ethic. The human relation to land,
he wrote, "is still strictly economic, entailing
privileges but not obligations." Leopold
believed that the basis of successful conservation
was to extend to nature the ethical sense
of responsibility that humans extend to
each other....The power of Leopold's argument-buttressed
as it is by his clear, vigorous prose-has
not been blunted in the least. In fact,
his argument seems more urgently true now
than ever. -- New York Times |
|
Reading
Zoos: Representations of Animals and Captivity
by
Randy Malamud |
|
The
Cockfighter: A Novel by Frank Manley
The
Cockfighter, Frank Manley's debut novel,
is a well-written coming-of-age tale set
in rural America. Almost 13, Sonny teeters
on the verge of manhood, rejecting his mother
Lily's attempts to coddle him, while trying
to model himself after his rough-hewn father
Jake, owner of the Snake Nation Cock Farm.
With echoes of Harry Crews and Flannery
O'Connor, Manley's southern country dialogue
and attitudes are right on the mark. --Independent
Publisher |
|
Why
the Wild Things Are: Animals in the Lives
of Children by Gail F. Melson
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
February, 2002 . Read
our staff review!
The
study of children, suggests Purdue professor
Melson, has tended to be humanocentric,
with the role of animals in childrens' lives
ignored. Yet, as she amply demonstrates,
young people often seem to have a closer
relationship with their pets than they do
with their parents. It is from animals,
the author argues, that children first learn
about love, loss, and loyalty; it is with
animals that children learn how to nurture.
Children, she suggests, may even understand
animals better than they understand adult
humans, since animals' behavior is simple
and straightforward. --David Pitt Copyright
© American Library Association. All
rights reserved |
|
Anthropomorphism,
Anecdotes and Animals by Robert W Mitchell,
Nicholas S. Thompson and H. Lyn Miles, (editors)
|
|
Children
and Animals: Social Development and Our Connections
to Other Species (Lives in Context) by
Gene Myers What
role does an animal play in a child's developing
sense of self? Do children and animals interact
in ways no longer recognizable to adults?
Children and Animals addresses these and
other intriguing questions by revealing
the interconnected lives of the inhabitants
of the preschool classroom-an environment
abounding in childish verbal and nonverbal
interactions with birds, turtles, toads,
snakes, bugs, and other creatures. |
|
Animal
Grace: Entering a Spiritual Relationship
With Our Fellow Creatures
by
Mary Lou Randour
Mary
Lou Randour, Ph.D., is the author of a book
on relationships among human beings and
other-than-human animals. Animal Grace:
Entering a Spiritual Relationship with Our
Fellow Creatures packs an enormous
amount of thought, anecdote, and careful
documentation into its 167 pages.
Building on such compelling and informative
books as Gary Kowalski's The Souls of Animals,
Susan McElroy's Animals as Teachers and
Healers (Susan provided a foreword to Animal
Grace), and other writing about animals'
minds, emotions, and spirituality
and on thousands of years of religious and
philosophical traditions, Mary Lou's book
takes readers an important step further.
*
PSY ETA Featured Title,
June, 2002 . Read
our staff review!
* note: this title is available throughSociety
and Animals Forums' own secure order page.
Click for more information
about the title . |
|
The
Animal Estate: The English and Other Creatures
in the Victorian Age
by Harriet Ritvo |
 |
Understanding
Dogs: Living and Working With Canine Companions
by Clinton R. Sanders
In
this latest treatise on the state of the
human-canine connection, sociologist Sanders
focuses on the sociological significance
of human relationships with dogs. It sounds
complicated, but this book is really quite
interesting. In a chatty, informative way,
Sanders examines how everyday dog owners
relate to their pets as thinking, emotional,
and responsive individuals, and he shows
exactly how pets reciprocate. Using anecdotes,
research, and hard data, Sanders discusses
the history of dog ownership, the problems
and joys of living with a dog, the day-to-day
work of veterinarians, and the everyday
lives of "dog-people." --Kathleen Hughes,
Booklist |
 |
In
the Company of Animals: A study of Human-
Animal Relationships
by
James Serpell
Contrasting
the way we love some animals while ruthlessly
exploiting others, this study provides a
detailed and fascinating account of the
ways in which animal companionship can influence
our health. It provides a key to the moral
contradiction inherent in our treatment
of animals and nature. |
|
The
Heretic's Feast: A History of Vegetarianism
by Colin Spencer |
|
Man
and the Natural World: Changing Attitudes
in England 1500-1800
by Keith Thomas
Throughout
the ages man has struggled with his perceived
place in the natural world. The idea of
humans cultivating the Earth fo suit specific
needs is one of the greatest points of contention
in this struggle. Man and the Natural World
explores how man's ascendancy over the natural
world gave way to a new concern for the
environment and sense of kinship with other
species. --Ingram |
|
The
Compassion of Animals:True Stories of Animal
Courage and Kindness by Kristen Von Kreisler
Here,
Kristin von Kreisler shares dozens of absorbing,
true stories of animals who've risked their
lives to keep the human they love out of
danger. You'll read of incredibly heroic
acts—from the dog who swallows a firecracker
to protect a toddler, to the horse who runs
through traffic to save an injured woman.
You'll come away from this profoundly moving
book with a deeper appreciation for the
indispensable role animals play in our daily
lives. |
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Companion
Animals in Human Health
by
Cindy Wilson and Dennis Turner (editors)
Explores
how animals affect the physical, mental,
emotional, social, functional, and general
health and well-being of their human companions.
Overviews the history and values of interactions
between humans and animals, develop a conceptual
framework for research, explore the psychosocial
and physiological impact, and address the
role of companion animals in human development
and the training and welfare of animals
in therapeutic programs. The 17 papers are
from the Seventh International Conference
on Animals, Health, and Quality of Life.
--Book News, Inc.®, Portland, OR |
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Biophilia
by Edward O. Wilson |
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Animal
Geographies: Place, Politics, and Identity
in the Nature-Culture Borderlands
by
Jennifer Wolch (Editor) & Jody Emel
(Editor)
A
highly topical survey of human's treatment
of animals. Each year billions of animals
are poisoned, dissected, displaced, killed
for consumption, or held in captivity to
be discarded as soon as their utility to
humans has waned. The animal world has never
been under greater peril. A broad-ranging
collection of essays, Animal Geographies
contributes to a much-needed, fundamental
rethinking about our relation to animals.
Animal Geographies explores the
diverse ways in which animals shape the
formation of human identity, looking, for
example, at the racialization and gendering
of animal images. From questions of identity
and subjectivity, it moves to consideration
of the places where people and animals confront
the realities of coexistence on an everyday
basis. It then examines the ways in which
animals figure in the ongoing globalization
of production and mass consumption, and
finally, takes up legal and ethical approaches
to human-animal relations. Animal Geographies
compels a profound rethinking of the
history of our relations with animals and
offers a series of proposals for reconstituting
this relationship on a progressive basis.
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Animals
and Human Society : Changing Perspectives
by
Aubrey Manning, James Serpell (Editor),
Audrey Manning (Editor)
As
modern society begins to re/examine its
relationship with animals, as well as the
larger global environment, the idea of small,
utopian minorities as the only ones concerned
with issues of animal welfare and environmental
protections has begun to be replaced. Vast
numbers of articulate supporters, from Hollywood
stars to powerful political figures are
now at the forefront of these fights. Animals,
both wild and domestic--spotted owls, alley
cats, lab rats and vanishing other species--are
the most visible issue in the debates. This
book brings together a broad range of contributions
from the distinguished in the field. The
book explores the importance of animals
in society from sociological, historical
and cross-cultural perspectives. |
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The
Use of Animals in Higher Education: Problems,
Alternatives, & Recommendations
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