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History North America

Horses in Society

A Story of Animal Breeding and Marketing Culture, 1800–1920

by (author) Margaret Derry

Publisher
University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
Initial publish date
Jun 2006
Category
North America, Horses
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781442675872
    Publish Date
    Jun 2006
    List Price
    $83.00

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Description

Before crude oil and the combustion engine, the industrialized world relied on a different kind of power — the power of the horse. Horses in Society is the story of horse production in the United States, Britain, and Canada at the height of the species” usefulness, the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century. Margaret E. Derry shows how horse breeding practices used during this period to heighten the value of the animals in the marketplace incorporated a intriguing cross section of influences, including Mendelism, eugenics, and Darwinism.

Derry elucidates the increasingly complex horse world by looking at the international trade in army horses, the regulations put in place by different countries to enforce better horse breeding, and general aspects of the dynamics of the horse market. Because it is a story of how certain groups attempted to control the market for horses, by protecting their breeding activities or “patenting” their work, Horses in Society provides valuable background information to the rapidly developing present-day problem of biological ownership. Derry's fascinating study is also a story of the evolution of animal medicine and humanitarian movements, and of international relations, particularly between Canada and the United States.

About the author

Margaret E. Derry is an adjunct professor in the Department of History at the University of Guelph, and an associated scholar wth the Institute for History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Toronto.

Margaret Derry's profile page

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