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The Lion's Historian : Africa's Animal Past / Sandra Swart.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Ebscohost Ebooks University Press Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Swart, Sandra, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Human-animal relationships--Africa--History.
Human-animal relationships.
Animals and civilization--Africa.
Animals and civilization.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (388 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Athens, Ohio : Ohio University Press, [2025]
Summary:
""Until the lion has a historian of his own, the tale of the hunt will always glorify the hunter." Sandra Swart takes up the challenge of that African proverb and, with this book, becomes the lion's historian. As a species, humans are not alone; but our history has been written as though we were. Swart insists on a multispecies retelling of our more-than-human past as she reconstructs a shifting series of significant interspecies relationships, from quirky, idiosyncratic connections to others that triggered major changes. Embracing a radical interdisciplinarity informed by a background in history and environmental studies, Swart combines the natural sciences with the social sciences, oral history, indigenous knowledge, and archival research. She blends current thinking about animal sentience, agency, cognition, and emotion to offer a new way to understand animals' role in our shared history. The animals in this book-baboons, cows, elephants, hippos, horses, jackals, lions, Nazi cattle, okapi, police dogs, quagga, sheep, and white ants-exemplify different facets of our shared past. With this animal-centric lens, decades of research are brought together in a collection that takes animals seriously. It is a book with claws and fangs, tearing through conventional narratives to ask, Are we prepared to move beyond the convention that "history" is the story of only our own species? The entanglements between humans and other animals have shaped our past, but they suggest something more. The possibility of our shared future pivots on a reckoning with our shared pasts. Swart shows what human-animal history can do, not only to understand our place in the world better but to make our world-however slightly-a better place"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Intro
Contents
Pachyderm Preface
ONE Beasts of the Southern World: How Do We Write African Animal History?
TWO The Lion's Historian: Hunting Animal Histories from the South
THREE Creatures of Contact: Animals and Power at the Mid-Seventeenth Century Cape
FOUR The Empire Rides Back: Horses and Indigenous Resistance
FIVE 'It Is as Bad to Be a Black Man's Animal as It Is to Be a Black Man': The Politics of Species and Race
SIX The White Soul of the Ant?: Insects and Identity
SEVEN Apartheid's Hounds: How South Africa Invented the World's Most Terrifying Police Dog
EIGHT Zombie Zoology:The End of Extinction?
NINE History for the End of the World: Finding New Futures in the Animal Past
Notes
Index.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-8214-2645-1
OCLC:
1509142056

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