City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

The perfection of nature, animals, breeding, and race in the Renaissance, Mackenzie Cooley

Label
The perfection of nature, animals, breeding, and race in the Renaissance, Mackenzie Cooley
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The perfection of nature
Nature of contents
dictionariesbibliography
Responsibility statement
Mackenzie Cooley
Sub title
animals, breeding, and race in the Renaissance
Summary
A deep history of how Renaissance Italy and the Spanish empire were shaped by a lingering fascination with breeding.The Renaissance is celebrated for the belief that individuals could fashion themselves to greatness, but there is a dark undercurrent to this fted era of history. The same men and women who offered profound advancements in European understanding of the human condition-and laid the foundations of the Scientific Revolution-were also obsessed with controlling that condition and the wider natural world.Tracing early modern artisanal practice, Mackenzie Cooley shows how the idea of race and theories of inheritance developed through animal breeding in the shadow of the Spanish Empire. While one strand of the Renaissance celebrated a liberal view of human potential, another limited it by biology, reducing man to beast and prince to stud. "Race, " Cooley explains, first referred to animal stock honed through breeding. To those who invented the concept, race was not inflexible, but the fragile result of reproductive work. As the Spanish empire expanded, the concept of race moved from nonhuman to human animals. Cooley reveals how, as the dangerous idea of controlled reproduction was brought to life again and again, a rich, complex, and ever-shifting language of race and breeding was born.Adding nuance and historical context to discussions of race and human and animal relations, The Perfection of Nature provides a close reading of undertheorized notions of generation and its discontents in the more-than-human world
Genre

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