03678nam 2200541 450 991046658130332120211103210940.01-5017-1510-010.1515/9781501715105(CKB)4100000007002629(MiAaPQ)EBC5541117(OCoLC)1008759278(MdBmJHUP)muse67654(StDuBDS)EDZ0001988494(DE-B1597)503465(DE-B1597)9781501715105(Au-PeEL)EBL5541117(EXLCZ)99410000000700262920181023d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierQuick cattle and dying wishes people and their animals in early modern England /Erica FudgeIthaca :Cornell University Press,[2018]©20181 online resource (260 pages)Cornell scholarship onlinePreviously issued in print: 2018.1-5017-1509-7 1-5017-1507-0 Includes bibliographical references and index.Frontmatter --Contents --Preface: Looking for Animals in Early Modern England: A Note on the Evidence --Acknowledgments --Introduction: Goldelocks and the Three Bequests --1. Counting Chickens in Early Modern Essex: Writing Animals into Early Modern Wills --2. The Fuller Will and the Agricultural Worlds of People and Animals --3. Named Partners and Other Rugs: Animals as Co-Workers in Early Modern England --4. Other Worldly Matter: The Immaterial Value of Quick Cattle --5. Less than Kind: The Transient Animals of Early Modern London --Afterword: Bovine Nostalgia --Bibliography of Primary Sources --IndexWhat was the life of a cow in early modern England like? What would it be like to milk that same cow, day-in, day-out, for over a decade? How did people feel about and toward the animals that they worked with, tended, and often killed? With these questions, Erica Fudge begins her investigation into a lost aspect of early modern life: the importance of the day-to-day relationships between humans and the animals with whom they worked. Such animals are and always have been, Fudge reminds us, more than simply stock; they are sentient beings with whom one must negotiate. It is the nature, meaning, and value of these negotiations that this study attempts to recover.By focusing on interactions between people and their livestock, Quick Cattle and Dying Wishes restores animals to the central place they once had in the domestic worlds of early modern England. In addition, the book uses human relationships with animals-as revealed through agricultural manuals, literary sources, and a unique dataset of over four thousand wills-to rethink what quick cattle meant to a predominantly rural population and how relationships with them changed as more and more people moved to the city. Offering a fuller understanding of both human and animal life in this period, Fudge innovatively expands the scope of early modern studies and how we think about the role that animals played in past cultures more broadly.Cornell scholarship online.Human-animal relationshipsEnglandHistory17th centuryElectronic books.Human-animal relationshipsHistory591.942Fudge Erica875862MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910466581303321Quick cattle and dying wishes2440727UNINA