Join Books.org — it's free

Pets - General & Miscellaneous, Dogs - General & Miscellaneous, Working Dogs, Animals - Habitats & Behaviors - General & Miscellaneous
Understanding Dogs by Clinton Sanders β€” book cover

Understanding Dogs

by Clinton Sanders
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Can people have authentic social relationships with speechless animals? What does your dog mean to you, your understanding of yourself, and your perceived and actual relationships with other s and the world? What do you mean to your dog?

In Understanding Dogs, sociologist and faithful dog companion Clinton R. Sanders explores the day-to-day experiences of living and working with domestic dogs. Based on a decade of research in veterinary offices and hospitals, dog guide training schools, and obediences classes -- and colored with his  personal experiences and observations at and outside home with his own canine companions -- Sanders's book examines how everyday dog owners come to know their animal companions as thinking, emotional, and responsive individuals.

Linking animal companionship with social as well as personal identity, Understanding Dogs uses detailed ethnographic data in viewing human and animal efforts to understand, manipulate, care for, and interact with each other. From nineteenth-century disapproval of what was seen as irresponsibly indulgent pet ownership among the poor to Bill Clinton's caring and fun-loving image and populist connection to the "common person" as achieved through his labrador companion Buddy, Sanders looks at how dogs serve not only as social facilitators but also as adornments to social identity. He also reveals how, while we often strive to teach and shape our dogs' behavior, dogs often teach us to appreciate with more awareness a nourishing meal, physical warmth, a walk in the woods, and the simple joys of the immediate moment.

Sanders devotes chapters to the specialized work of guide dog trainers; the problems and joys experienced by guide dog owners; the day-to-day work of veterinarians dealing with the healing, death, and euthanizing of their animal patients; and the everyday interactions, assumptions, and approaches of people who choose, for various reasons and in various ways, to spend their lives in the company of dogs.

Understanding Dogs will interest those who live and work with animals as well as those studying the sociology of human-animal interactions.

About the Author, Clinton Sanders

Clinton R. Sanders is co-author of Regarding Animals (Temple) and Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Library Journal

Sanders has written a book that is at once insightful and delightful. The co-author of Regarding Animals (Temple Univ., 1996) is a professor of sociology who spends a lot of time with dogs. How lucky! But while the rest of us dog people use our leisure time to play with our canine companions, Sanders studies the interactions of humans and dogs. His research takes him to veterinary clinics and introduces him to guide dog owners and trainers and to people like us. He focuses on the mutually dependent relationship that develops between dogs and people and on the question of how dogs think, communicate, and have intentions. Do sociologists have it made, or what? Highly recommended for academic and public libraries.--Peggie Partello, Keene State Coll. Lib., NH Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 21, 2010
Publisher
Temple University Press
Pages
224
ISBN
9781439905241

Similar books