Becoming Centaur by Monica Mattfeld

Becoming Centaur by Monica Mattfeld

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Summary

Explores the history of horse-human relationships over the long eighteenth century, and how these relationships in turn influenced performances of gender. Examines the agential influence of horses in their riders’ lives, horses on stage and the early circus, and the politicization of human-animal being.

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Becoming Centaur by Monica Mattfeld

Explores the history of horse-human relationships over the long eighteenth century, and how these relationships in turn influenced performances of gender. Examines the agential influence of horses in their riders' lives, horses on stage and the early circus, and the politicization of human-animal being.

“Monica Mattfeld explores eighteenth-century English masculinity and gentlemanly honor from a scintillating new perspective—the horse’s backRichly archival and theoretically alert, this splendid book illuminates the equestrian worlds of William Cavendish, London riding houses, the hunting field, Philip Astley’s celebrity circuses, and Henry Bunbury’s savage satires, revealing a hidden history of horses as secret sharers and historical agents in Englishmen’s self-imagining. A must for historians as well as animal studies scholars.”

—Donna Landry, author of Noble Brutes: How Eastern Horses Transformed English Culture


“This is the first detailed study of horsemanship and masculine identity across a long period, reinforcing our appreciation of the iconic status of horses through the eras. While Mattfeld draws on work done on the seventeenth century in particular, she takes the analysis forward into comparatively untouched territory. In doing so, she not only opens up the latter period but also charts the changes that occurred over time, resulting in a work of considerable value.”

—Peter Edwards, author of The Horse Trade of Tudor and Stuart England


“Monica Mattfeld’s brilliant and incisive book describes the embodied process of co-becoming that entangled men and horses in eighteenth-century culture. Blending posthumanist and materialist perspectives to illustrate how the horse-human partnership was crucial to the creation of diverse and competing versions of masculinity, Mattfeld offers a thoroughly historicized and original account of ‘centauric leviathans,’ equine theatrical actors, urban riding schools, and reactionary satirists, adding exciting new scholarship to a burgeoning field.”

—Karen Raber, author of Animal Bodies, Renaissance Culture


“Mattfeld’s book covers an interesting time period as well as imperative questions in relation to the social construction of masculinities. Moreover, she presents new knowledge of how the human–horse relationships are essential for the understanding of masculinity performance in the long eighteenth century.”

—Susanna Hedenborg idrottsforum.org: Nordic Sport Science Forum


Becoming Centaur deftly blends cultural, political, and human-animal history. It is a masterful case study of how a particular social group—in this case elite horsemen—can shed light on broader cultural and political trends, both illustrating and complicating dominant narratives of change over time.”

—Ingrid H. Tague Journal of Modern History

Monica Mattfeld is Assistant Professor of English and History at the University of Northern British Columbia and coeditor of Performing Animals, also published by Penn State University Press.

SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780271075785
ISBN 10 0271075783
Title Becoming Centaur
Author Monica Mattfeld
Series Animalibus
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Pennsylvania State University Press
Year published 2018-10-24
Number of pages 288
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.