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A History of Dogs in the Early Americas

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For more than 12 000 years the dog has coexisted with humans in the Americas following pathways much different from those of dogs in Europe and Asia. New World dogs have been viewed as sacred and profane as deities as eaters of excrement and as valued food. This entertaining and enlightening book examines the fluctuating status of dogs in Native America from prehistory to the present. Drawing on chronicles ethnographies archaeological reports myths biology and a rich array of visual materials Marion Schwartz investigates views about dogs in a wide range of native societies in North and South America. She discusses the early domestication of the dog and looks at how hunting and gathering peoples relied on dogs to help with the hunt and to transport food and goods. She provides details about the eating of dogs for ritual purposes or as a dietary staple. She describes how dogs were associated with the afterlife where they functioned as guides or guards and how dogs were buried in tombs or were sacrificed to the gods in many cultures. She examines pre-Columbian art to see how the dog was portrayed and the various meanings attributed to it. The book concludes with a description of the fierce war dogs brought by the Spanish to wreak havoc among the Indiansdogs unlike any the New World had ever seenand how traditional societies reinvented their relationship with dogs after the arrival of the Europeans.

Product details

Publisher
My Store
Publication date
October 11, 1998
ISBN-10
0300075197
ISBN-13
9780300075199
Item Weight
15.2 oz
Dimensions
0.59 × 6.1 × 9.21 in
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