Contents
Introduction
Part 1: Making New Animal Meanings
Animal Writes: Historiography, Disciplinarity, and the Animal Trace
Mobility and the Making of Animal Meaning: The Kinetics of “Vermin” and “Wildlife” in Southern Africa
Cannibalism, Consumption, and Kinship in Animal Studies
Part 2: Applying New Animal Meanings
The Renaissance Transformation of Animal Meaning: From Petrarch to Montaigne
On the Trail of the Devil Cat: Hunting for the Jaguar in the United States and Mexico
Animal Deaths and the Written Record of History: The Politics of Pet Obituaries
Golden Retrievers Are White, Pit Bulls Are Black, and Chihuahuas Are Hispanic: Representations of Breeds of Dog and Issues of Race in Popular Culture
Interspecies Families, Freelance Dogs, and Personhood: Saved Lives and Being One at an Assistance Dog Agency
Animal Meaning in T. S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats
Animals at the End of the World: Notes toward a Transspecies Eschatology
Bibliography
Contributors
Index