1. Monster's World
2. Helping/Policing/Killing
3. The Myth of the Irresponsible Owner
4. The Struggle for Shelter Animal Survival
5. The Transformative Power of Grief
6. The Peculiar Problem of Pit Bulls
7. Animals' Resistance to Shelter Rule
8. Waiting, Wondering, and Wavering
9. A New Revolution
Katja M. Guenther is Associate Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of California, Riverside, and author of Making Their Place (Stanford, 2010).
"In this powerful and timely book, you will meet Gemma, Kali,
Monster, Pretty Girl, Jesse, Jake, and many other four-legged
beings whose situations in an animal shelter expose overlapping
forms of oppression involving race, gender, class, and species.
Katja M. Guenther unlocks the shelter door and eloquently explains
this complicated and contested multispecies space, as she reflects
on issues such as witnessing, vulnerability, advocacy,
grievability, compassion, and animal resistance."—Carol J. Adams,
author of The Sexual Politics of Meat
"In this compassionate, incisive ethnography of an animal shelter,
Katja M. Guenther illuminates the entangled injustices that shape
human relationships with other animals. The emotional, practical,
and political contradictions of killing our companions become
important sites for understanding exercises of power over others
and possibilties for resistance. In addition to providing a
conceptual framework for making animal deaths grievable, this book
provides important new insights for critical animal studies."—Lori
Gruen, author of Entangled Empathy
"Katja M. Guenther captures the intricate world of animal
sheltering and shelter volunteerism in a brilliantly executed
multispecies ethnographical work. With the perfect balance of
intimacy and analytical depth, the author reminds us of how messy
things can get when caring and killing become one, or when the
value of the animal companion's life is measured by the race,
gender, and zip code of the owner."—Bénédicte Boisseron, author of
Afro-Dog
"Over the past eight years, I've been part of leading three,
open-admission government shelters. This remarkable book addresses
virtually every systematic issue I've experienced and accurately
examines the complexities of the sheltering institution. Katja M.
Guenther gets it right. This is a must-read for anyone working or
volunteering in an animal shelter. I promise, it will change the
way you see your job and make you ask yourself tough questions
about where we go from here."—Kristen Hassen, Director, American
Pets Alive!
"The Lives and Deaths of Shelter Animals is an important read for
anyone interested in the social world of animal shelters."—Michał
Piotr Pręgowski, Anthrozoös
"Dr. Guenther's book is an extremely important work that encourages
us to be more compassionate and reminds us that the oppressive
systems at work in society at large are also at work in the
microcosm of the shelter. The book invites us to rethink the entire
sheltering system to make it more equitable and humane."—Community
Cats Podcast
"Guenther brings a humane perspective to human and animal behavior.
In her skillful analysis of the animal shelter's practices and
policies, the connections between the marginalization of minority
human groups and the marginalization of animals become clear... By
investigating the zoological connection between the animal shelter
and the community it serves, she vastly expands current notions of
intersectionality, democracy, and inclusivity."—Leslie Irvine,
American Journal of Sociology
"Katja Guenther is a radical researcher who wants to change the
situation of animals through her research, which is an appeal for a
radical transformation of the relationships between humans and
animals; it is the call for a revolution."—Krzysztof T. Konecki,
Symbolic Interation
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