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With the establishment of national kennel clubs, conformation dog shows, and pedigrees that only register "purebred" dogs, the majority of these breeds have only been developed in the last 165 years. Today's dog comes in a seemingly infinite range of sizes, shapes, coats, and colors. This diversity is the product of selective breeding that, in turn, is primarily in the hands of breeders and judges.
Perhaps nowhere is the diversity of the dog more evident than in the skull, which, in contrast to wild canids, is too often misshapen and deformed. With selective breeding to arbitrary standards of canine beauty comes myriad health concerns, including shortened life expectancy in many cases. We have literally shaped--and continue to alter--the domestic dog, but we must ultimately ask two questions: for what purpose and at what cost to our "best friend"?
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments viii
Preface
Introduction: Wolf and Dog
Chapter One. Into Our Homes and the Show Ring
Chapter Two. Mastiffs and Bulldogs
Chapter Three. Livestock Guardians and Herders
Chapter Four. Terriers (And Some Bull-and-Terriers)
Chapter Five. Sight Hounds
Chapter Six. Scent Hounds
Chapter Seven. Gun Dogs
Chapter Eight. Spitzes
Chapter Nine. Soviet Service Dogs
Chapter Ten. Other Breeds
Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Bryan Cummins, PhD, is an anthropologist who has conducted archival and field research in Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, and France and taught for McMaster University's Department of Anthropology for 25 years. He lives in Ontario, Canada.