CONTENTS
PREFACE
iii
CONTRIBUTORS
viii
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1
Sindhu Radhakrishna
3
PART II: TRADITIONAL VIEWS OF MACAQUES
30
Harry F Harlow
32
3. The Japanese and Japanese Monkeys: Dissonant Neighbors Seeking Accommodation in aShared Habitat
Yoshihisa Mito and David Sprague
53
Sindhu Radhakrishna
80
PART III: COOPERATIVE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN HUMANS AND MACAQUES
112
Neel Ahuja
114
Avanti Mallapur
154
Agustin Fuentes
180
PART IV: CURRENT SCENARIOS OF HUMAN-MACAQUE CONFLICT
212
K. P. Poornachandra Tejaswi
Translated from Kannada by Honnavalli N Kumara and Shantala Kumar
214
Charmalie A. D. Nahallage and Michael A. Huffman
227
Jeffrey Peterson and Erin Riley
251
Bonaventura Majolo, Els van Lavieren, Laetitia Marechal, Ann MacLarnon, Garry Marvin, Mohamed Qarro and StuartSemple
286
PART V: HOW LIVING WITH AND BESIDE HUMANS HAS AFFECTED MACAQUES
317
Anindya Sinha and Kakoli Mukhopadhyay
319
Debapriyo Chakraborty and David Glenn Smith
358
Nancy E. C. Priston and Matthew R. McLennan
391
INDEX
From the reviews:“This book focuses on macaques, the most widely distributed and behaviorally flexible nonhuman primate species. … a useful, timely collection of essays highlighting the diversity of the genus and its interface with humans. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals.” (L. Swedell, Choice, Vol. 50 (8), April, 2013)“The Macaque Connection … explores the many ways in which humans and macaques have connected in the past and the present. … The Macaque Connection focuses on providing a rich historical perspective on a wider range of macaque species. The Macaque Connection therefore has greater relevance for historians and cultural anthropologists. … of interest to primatologists––especially macaque researchers.” (Crystal M. Riley, International Journal of Primatology, Vol. 34, 2013)
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