Aviculture: a history

Author:   Ingvar Svanberg ,  Daniel Moller
Publisher:   Hancock House Publishers Ltd ,Canada
ISBN:  

9780888391537


Pages:   268
Publication Date:   01 September 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Aviculture: a history


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Overview

A comprehensive overview of the history of bird keeping across the world. This book discusses the history of aviculture and the cultural extent of keeping and raising birds in captivity for pleasure, companion, ornamental reasons, religious causes or various economic or practical purposes. Since the dawn of mankind, humans have kept birds in captivity. Several species are truly domesticated, while others have simply been bred in captivity for many generations. Today bird-keeping for pleasure appears to be declining in the West, mostly due to bird protection and growing awareness about conservation issues. Although aviculture has had, and still has a deep impact on human beings, it remains a neglected field within humanities and social sciences. Relatively little is published about the cultural and historical aspects of aviculture. This anthology is intended for a general audience of readers and it shows various aspects of keeping birds in captivity for pleasure, ornamental reasons or practical purposes around the world. It also deals with the great variety and complexity of the practice of keeping birds, and the specific cultures which have developed around it. The first chapter gives a brief introduction to the questions we focus on in the book, together with a historic overview from prehistory to early twenty-first century, including pet birds among natives in South America, Southeast Asia and Africa, sailors and their parrots, birds in religious rituals, primitive domesticates in various peasant societies, etc. The other chapters offer descriptive case studies in pre-modern and early modern ways of bird-keeping in various historical contexts. Modern aviculture in zoological gardens is discussed and specific bird categories within twentieth-century aviculture are described in some chapters. We encounter sophisticated bird-keeping in pre-Columbian societies, Norse trade with falcons, the European craze for songbirds, practices with captive birds used in human habitations to keep vermin under control, and see how avicultural expertise is used for trying to save vanishing species by breeding them in captivity. Together these topics illustrate the great variety and complexities of bird-keeping practice. The authors are specialists in aviculture and most of them hail from the countries about which they write. This book bridges the disciplines of cultural anthropology, ethnobiology, history, natural history and ornithology and is intended to benchmark the development of the subject for a broader audience, which until now has had few possibilities to become acquainted with it.

Full Product Details

Author:   Ingvar Svanberg ,  Daniel Moller
Publisher:   Hancock House Publishers Ltd ,Canada
Imprint:   Hancock House Publishers Ltd ,Canada
Dimensions:   Width: 21.60cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 27.90cm
Weight:   0.748kg
ISBN:  

9780888391537


ISBN 10:   0888391536
Pages:   268
Publication Date:   01 September 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Finally, the science behind and history of aviculture gets the recognition it deserves. Birds have long dazzled us as a unique component of the natural world. Whether it be their mastery of flight, the occupation of and adaptation to every major ecosystem on Earth, their unparalleled songs, their flamboyant courtship displays, or the possession of an evolutionary masterpiece, the feather, humans have worshipped, sought, and highly prized this highly varied class of vertebrate animals. It was for these reasons, and assuredly others, that man began bringing these birds into the home to study, propagate and enjoy their elaborate behaviors, habits, and ornamentation. The keeping of birds is a widely held, centuries-old tradition that involves methods as diverse as the creatures this book discusses. One of the many reasons for keeping birds was to capitalize on their uncanny evolutionary prowess, putting to use their finely developed abilities to enhance human cultural practices. This text includes many examples of how birds have improved human lives, such as the purpose of pest control, from the tamed wading birds of Finland that eliminated cockroach infestations to the Mexican roadrunners kept in homes to eliminate mice, snakes, and other undesirable visitors. Yet another example, falconry, is an ancient tradition that is at least 4,000 years old and is still practiced today, and highlights the relationship that can exist between human and avian kind. This tome truly captures the many ways birds have enhanced human societies and have continued to pique our curiosity about the natural world. These aviculturists, who even today continue to share their vast knowledge and experience with a great diversity of avian species, have added so much to our collective knowledge of the natural history of birds from around the world. This history of aviculture reinforces the work of today's aviculturists, both the professional and the hobbyist, who are keeping countless species in existence to ensure a future with birds. This volume is a true triumph and should be included in the library of every bird enthusiast, zoo, museum, and university. The Auk: Ornithological Advances 136:268-2, (c) 2019 American Ornithological Society Review by Jason J. Crean 2812 Edgewood Parkway, Woodridge, Illinois, USA


Author Information

Ingvar Svanberg is a Swedish ethnobiologist at Uppsala University, and as a scholar specialized in human relationship with domestic animals, especially birds in captivity. He has published many books and scientific articles in international journals. He is also editor of the Swedish avicultural journal Serinus.

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