Animal spaces, beastly places : new geographies of human-animal relations / edited by Chris Philo and Chris Wilbert.
Material type: TextSeries: Critical geographies | ; 10Publication details: London : Routledge, 2000Edition: 1st editionDescription: xv, 311 pages : illustrationsISBN: 041519847X; 9780415198479Subject(s): Space and place - Social aspects | Animal-human relationshipsDDC classification: 179.3Item type | Current library | Home library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations | |
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Book | Ruskin College Library | Ruskin College Library | 179.3 PHI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | R35095J0085 |
Includes bibliographical references.
Animal spaces, beastly places : an introduction / Chris Philo, Chris Wilbert -- Flush and the banditti : dog-stealing in Victorian London / Philip Howell -- Feral cats in the city / Huw Griffiths, Ingrid Poulter, David Sibley -- Constructing the animal worlds of inner-city Los Angeles / Jennifer Wolch, Alec Brownlow, Unna Lassiter -- Taking stock of farm animals and rurality / Richard Yarwood, Nick Evans -- Versions of animal-human : Broadland, c. 1945-1970 / David Matless -- A wolf in the garden : ideology and change in the Adirondack landscape / Alec Brownlow -- What's a river without fish? Symbol, space and ecosystem in the waterways of Japan / Paul Waley -- Fantastic Mr Fox? Representing animals in the hunting debate / Michael Woods -- 'Hunting with the camera' : photography, wildlife and colonialism in Africa / James R. Ryan -- Biological cultivation : Lubetkin's modernism at London Zoo in the 1930s / Pyrs Gruffudd -- Virtual animals in electronic zoos : the changing geographies of animal capture and display / Gail Davies -- (Un)ethical geographies of human--non-human relations : encounters, collectives and spaces / Owain Jones -- Afterword : enclosure / Michael J. Watts.
This book explores the variations on the human-animal spatial orderings. It develops new ways of thinking about human animal interactions and encourages us to find new ways for humans and animals to live together.
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