Reviews
[A]n exhaustive and engrossing survey of the millennia-long relationship between cats and people... traces the process of their rise with aplomb, from Ancient Greece to Grumpy Cat.
A readable and clear-sighted book that tracks the histories of cats of all stripes from their earliest origins to their ubiquitous presence in twenty-first-century social media. Engagingly written, the book tells the story of the ups and downs in cat-human relationships through a wealth of detailed evidence and fascinating first-hand accounts.
Cats tells the story of changing cat-human relations in an engaging and sophisticated manner, starting with domestication and ending in the present day. The chapters are like a series of learned lectures, where readers will enjoy both a grand narrative and entertaining illustrations.
Paradoxically, the ubiquity of cats has restricted rather than compelled interrogations into the origins and characteristics of this specific human-animal relationship. Their everywhere-ness has somehow made us incurious. Phillips's book comprehensively corrects this major oversight in a fascinating and deeply satisfying manner. You love cats, and now you know why.
Book Details
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. From Wildcats to Cats
2. Ancient Egypt: A Celebration of Cats
3. Ancient Greece and Rome: The Ambiguity of Cats
4. The Middle Ages: Cats in the Secular World
5. The Middle
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. From Wildcats to Cats
2. Ancient Egypt: A Celebration of Cats
3. Ancient Greece and Rome: The Ambiguity of Cats
4. The Middle Ages: Cats in the Secular World
5. The Middle Ages: Cats and Religion
6. Early Modern Europe: Cats as Disruptors
7. The Enlightenment: Thinking About Cats
8. Cats Go Global, 1500–1900
9. The War on Cats in the Nineteenth Century
10. Defending Cats in the Nineteenth Century
11. Pet Cats on the Rise in the Twentieth Century
12. Cats in the Modern World: Here to Stay?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index