Acknowledgments
Preface: Three Species
Introduction: Cephalopods in the Nile
Part I: Burdened and Beastly
1. Early Modern Human and Animal
2. Unleashing the Beast
Part II: Bark and Bite
3. In-Between
4. Evolution in the Streets
Part III. Charisma and Capital
5. Enchantment
6. Encagement
Conclusion: The Human Ends
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Alan Mikhail is Professor of History at Yale University. He is the author of Nature and Empire in Ottoman Egypt: An Environmental History, which won the Roger Owen Book Award of the Middle East Studies Association, and editor of Water on Sand: Environmental Histories of the Middle East and North Africa.
"The book is well researched and supported by copious archival and
manuscript resources from Europe, North America, North Africa, and
Asia....Mikhail marshals abundant evidence to support his thesis
about the dramatic changes in human-animal relationships wrought by
modernization."--Tobias J. Lanz, Environmental History
"Camels, donkeys, dogs, and water buffalo have their histories too,
and in this compact book Alan Mikhail deftly shows just how closely
intertwined they, and the histories of other animals, were with the
human history of Ottoman Egypt. Carefully researched, lavishly
illustrated, and engagingly written, this book sets a high standard
for the historical study of human-animal relations and opens new
vistas on the history of Egypt."--J.R. McNeill, author of
Mosquito Empires
"In this deeply and imaginatively researched book, Alan Mikhail
uses insights drawn from the new field of animal history to revisit
major transitions in Egyptian history, including modernization,
urbanization, and integration into global networks. Particularly
striking is the way his argument encompasses both the material
conditions of animal existence, such as labor and disease, and the
more abstract impact of religion, law, and politics."--Harriet
Ritvo,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"This is a fascinating book, which uses the diminishing presence of
animals in various key locations to shed light on major social
transformations in late 18th and early 19th century Egypt.
Everything from climate and bacteria to foreign imperialists and
their new technologies shaped the new Egypt that we see emerging in
this book; each of these agents of change gets its due in Mikhail's
intricate story."--Kenneth Pomeranz, University of Chicago
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