Chapter ID: CBB104882127

Companion Animals (2017)

unapi

Women were less active in the field of zoology they were in botany. Many of the observations Darwin was sent were from amateur observers, rather than from people who had made a special study of the subject. Most people in the Victorian period lived closely with animals; horses were used for transport, and dogs and cats might be pampered pets or semi-independent household companions; even an invalid might have a bird for entertainment. Darwin's comments on animal behaviour, in Variation under domestication, Descent of man, and Expression of the emotions, attracted much interest. The analogies Darwin drew between human and animal behaviour struck a chord with many; and women in particular drew conclusions about human treatment of animals. Where Darwin's female correspondents made formal studies of animals, they were on insects, barnacles, and earthworms. The correspondence on animals has therefore being divided into two chapters: Companion animals and Insects and angels, ‘insect’ being the popular term for any small, apparently insignificant, creature. (No reflection is made on the actual companionableness of insects—John Lubbock had a pet wasp— or on the usefulness of companion animals; the distinction, which is admittedly loose, points only to a difference of approach.)

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Book Samantha Evans (2017) Darwin and Women: A Selection of Letters. unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Evans, Samantha
Smith, Elise Lawton
Page, Judith W
White, Paul S.
Varma, Charissa S.
Thierry, Bernard
Journals
Women's History Review
Journal of the History of Ideas
Comptes Rendus Biologies
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of California, Riverside
Concepts
Collected correspondence
Women in science
Women
Science and gender
Family
Observation
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Darwin, Emma Wedgwood
Meteyard, Eliza
Sophia Bledsoe Herrick
Nevill, Dorothy Fanny Walpole
Wedgwood, family
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
Places
Great Britain
Europe
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