Arturo Luna Loranca (Author)
Villa-Flores, Javier (Advisor)
This dissertation studies how ideas about economic productivity and the management of natural resources and populations during the Enlightenment deemed specific life forms as disposable. It also examines why particular groups of people pushed against this view of the world. I explore this phenomenon by focusing on the first systematic killing of dogs in the Americas enacted by government authorities. From 1770 to 1821, the colonial government of Mexico City, the capital of New Spain, ordered the corps of guardafaroles (nightwatchmen) to kill any dog (stray or domestic) found roaming after dusk. During this period, the guardafaroles claimed the lives of 20,000 to 35,000 dogs. Although state and Church authorities claimed the dog slaughters improved urban living conditions and benefited the populace, Mexico City commoners opposed the measure. Based on a social constructivist approach, I contend that principles found in Catholicism and oeconomic theory (an early modern concept encompassing the management of the household, natural resources, and governance) explain authorities’ contempt towards dogs. Church authorities in eighteenth-century Mexico City embraced the notion that animals had to be subservient to humankind. The version of oeconomy espoused by Spanish statesmen and government officials in Mexico City framed nature, animals included, as a vital resource for state-building practices. According to them, the appropriate exploitation of nature held the key to economic independence and self-sufficiency and keeping human populations alive, healthy, and productive. In the process, these bureaucrats also created categories of disposability. In their eyes, urban dogs were wasteful consumers of resources and hindrances to urbanites’ well-being. Because common urbanites, particularly plebian members, rarely wrote about dogs, the dissertation takes a materialist approach to explain these groups’ resistance to the slaughters. I argue that common urbanites and plebian people had different perspectives on dogs based on their interactions with these animals. I demonstrate that plebian groups relied on the sale of dog feces to supplement their meager incomes, and dog owners saw their canine companions as integral members of their households due to the labor they afforded.
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Book
Mikhail, Alan;
(2014)
The Animal in Ottoman Egypt
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001422352/)
Thesis
Feller, D A;
(cited 2011)
The Hunter's Gaze: Charles Darwin and the Role of Dogs and Sport in Nineteenth Century Natural History
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001567341/)
Thesis
Feller, D. A.;
(2011)
The Hunter's Gaze: Charles Darwin and the Role of Dogs and Sport in Nineteenth-Century Natural History
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001562815/)
Chapter
Tortorici, Zeb;
(2013)
“In the Name of the Father and the Mother of All Dogs”: Canine Baptisms, Weddings, and Funerals in Bourbon Mexico
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001422675/)
Book
Allyson N. May;
(2013)
The Fox-Hunting Controversy, 1781-2004: Class and Cruelty
(/p/isis/citation/CBB789407994/)
Book
Ingram, Darcy;
(2013)
Wildlife, Conservation, and Conflict in Quebec, 1840--1914
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001422396/)
Chapter
Smith, Harvey R.;
Clark, Tim W.;
(2003)
Wild Animals in Connecticut's Changing Landscape
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000774014/)
Book
Mary R. Tahan;
(2021)
The Return of the South Pole Sled Dogs: With Amundsen’s and Mawson’s Antarctic Expeditions
(/p/isis/citation/CBB637110722/)
Article
Pemberton, Neil;
(2013)
The Bloodhound's Nose Knows? Dogs and Detection in Anglo-American Culture
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001213635/)
Article
Edmund Ramsden;
(2018)
A Neurotic Dog’s Life: Experimental Psychiatry and the Conditional Reflex Method in the Work of W. Horsley Gantt
(/p/isis/citation/CBB851778951/)
Article
Kirk, Robert G. W.;
(2014)
In Dogs We Trust? Intersubjectivity, Response-Able Relations, and the Making of Mine Detector Dogs
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001214610/)
Article
Pearson, Chris;
(2013)
Dogs, History, and Agency
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001202107/)
Book
Edmund Russell;
(2018)
Greyhound Nation: A Coevolutionary History of England, 1200-1900
(/p/isis/citation/CBB501862278/)
Article
Lynteris, Christos;
(2013)
Skilled Natives, Inept Coolies: Marmot Hunting and the Great Manchurian Pneumonic Plague (1910--1911)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001212968/)
Article
Masseti, Marco;
(2009)
Pictorial Evidence From Medieval Italy of Cheetahs and Caracals, and Their Use in Hunting
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000931227/)
Book
Dan Flores;
(2016)
Coyote America: A Natural and Supernatural History
(/p/isis/citation/CBB468899431/)
Article
Fountain, Steven M.;
(2014)
Ranchers' Friend and Farmers' Foe: Reshaping Nature with Beaver Reintroduction in California
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001420286/)
Chapter
Jablonski Walker, Suzanne;
(2007)
Making and Breaking the Stag: The Construction of the Animal in the Early Modern Hunting Treatise
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000773421/)
Article
Edgington, Ryan;
(2009)
The Safari of the Southwest: Hunting, Science, and the African Oryx on White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, 1969--2006
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001030811/)
Article
Francisco Omar Escamilla-González;
Lucero Morelos-Rodríguez;
(2020)
Bringing Werner’s teachings to the New World: Andrés Manuel del Río and the Chair of Mineralogy in the School of Mines of Mexico (1795–1805)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB119559251/)
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