The animal other : horse training in early modernity
conference contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00authored byPeter Mewett
This historical sociological analysis of the training of horses for competition in early modernity draws from the sociology of the body to suggest that animals as we know them are constructed through human social processes. Contemporary horse-care publications are used to demonstrate how equine bodies were shaped through an application of humoral physiological theory. That is, they were made suitable for the human requirements of the time through preparatory procedures informed by models of somatic functioning used widely to understand humans and animals alike. The broader issue canvassed here is that ‘embodiment’ should include animal as well as human bodies. Through selective breeding, raising and care, animals have bodies that are shaped to human requirements – they embody human social processes.
History
Event
Australian Sociological Association. Conference (2008 : Melbourne, Vic.)
Publisher
University of Melbourne
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
Place of publication
Melbourne, Vic.
Start date
2008-12-02
End date
2008-12-05
ISBN-13
9780734039842
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Title of proceedings
TASA 2008 : Re-imagining sociology : the annual conference of The Australian Sociological Association