Creatures of Empire Quotes
Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
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Virginia DeJohn Anderson305 ratings, 3.78 average rating, 26 reviews
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Creatures of Empire Quotes
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“But colonists had no idea how fully their energies would be absorbed in clearing land, planting crops (especially tobacco in the Chesapeake), building houses, and working at all the other tasks necessary to establish new towns and plantations. With scarcely any time or labor to spare for their animals, they had to let livestock take care of themselves. This highly attenuated free-range style of husbandry (which operated year-round in the Chesapeake and seasonally in New England) undermined the colonists’ assertions about this aspect of their own civility even as it presented neighboring Indians with a whole set of problems that lacked easy answers.”
― Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
― Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
“Books about colonization in early America more typically dwell on themes of politics, trade, religion, demography, and warfare. Without discounting the importance of these topics (for each has a place here) and with no intention of offering a monocausal explanation for complex events, this book argues that sometimes mundane decisions about how to feed pigs or whether or not to build a fence also could affect the course of history.”
― Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
― Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
