Show
11 citations
related to Pets
Show
11 citations
related to Pets as a subject or category
Book
Michael Worboys
(2023)
Doggy people: The Victorians who made the modern dog.
(/isis/citation/CBB958196913/)
Article
Shira Shmuely
(2020)
Alfred Wallace’s Baby Orangutan: Game, Pet, Specimen.
Journal of the History of Biology
(pp. 321-343).
(/isis/citation/CBB786517117/)
Book
Kari Weil
(2020)
Precarious Partners: Horses and Their Humans in Nineteenth-Century France.
(/isis/citation/CBB300272059/)
Book
Christian Reiß
(2020)
Der Axolotl: Ein Labortier im Heimaquarium 1864-1914.
(/isis/citation/CBB048370705/)
Article
Eric Tourigny
(2020)
Do all dogs go to heaven? Tracking human-animal relationships through the archaeological survey of pet cemeteries.
Antiquity
(pp. 1614-1629).
(/isis/citation/CBB513025028/)
Article
Charlotte Kroløkke
(April 2019)
Life in the cryo-kennel: The ‘exceptional’ life of frozen pet DNA.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 162-179).
(/isis/citation/CBB617942547/)
Book
Ingrid H. Tague
(2015)
Animal Companions: Pets and Social Change in Eighteenth-Century Britain.
(/isis/citation/CBB079105085/)
Book
Ann-Janine Morey
(2014)
Picturing Dogs, Seeing Ourselves: Vintage American Photographs.
(/isis/citation/CBB818895674/)
Article
Wohleber, Curt
(Summer 2006)
Cat Litter.
American Heritage of Invention and Technology
(pp. 8-9).
(/isis/citation/CBB428892658/)
Book
Jennifer Mason
(2005)
Civilized Creatures: Urban Animals, Sentimental Culture, and American Literature, 1850–1900.
(/isis/citation/CBB421049105/)
Book
Louise E. Robbins
(2002)
Elephant Slaves and Pampered Parrots: Exotic Animals in Eighteenth-Century Paris.
(/isis/citation/CBB784825196/)
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