Historian James Turner focuses on the great rise of Victorian concern
for the humane treatment of animals, one of the most noteworthy
flowering of such sentiment in modern times and one that engaged the
support of the rich and the powerful, of church dignitaries, peers and
ministers, and the queen herself. In delving into the history of animal
rights, he also offers a fresh perspective on such varied aspects of
Victorian culture as attitudes toward sex, pain, child labor, women,
poverty, and science.
Turner draws on extensive research in the archives of animal protection
societies, literature of the period, and controversial writings on the
treatment of animals. He argues that the dual shocks of
industrialization and urbanization helped produce a deeper emotional
identification with the natural world. Scientists of the day,
proclaiming that human beings were close kin to beasts, not only
encouraged but demanded considerate treatment for animals, a sentiment
that reached its liveliest expression in the antivivisection
controversy. By the turn of the century, the author demonstrates, new
conceptions of human nature and heightened sensitivity even to the
plight of lower life-forms were contributing to a new understanding of
man's place in nature.