The Powerful Bond Between People and Pets:
Our Boundless Connection to Companion Animals
An engaging and science-based examination of people and companion animals, this book shows how their lives are inextricably intertwined, what the impact has been on culture and on society, the reasons people go to great lengths to care for and protect their beloved animals, and why the grief is so profound and unique when the animals are lost or die. Anderson, a longtime animal welfare advocate, also shows how we conversely ignore the suffering of some animals. She explains what can be done about this dissonance and what the future holds.
Beginning with the history of the human-animal bond, which dates to the Paleolithic era, Anderson takes us through the evolution of domestication and surveys companion animals around the world. The biological, behavioral, and psychosocial bases of the relationship between humans and their companion animals are examined, as is whether the companion animals are adversely affected as they are embedded into the human world. The expansive and unusual therapeutic benefits of companion animals is included as well, as are ways companion animals are protected, ranging from medical efforts to legal battles over wills and custody.
Anderson incorporates news stories, interviews, and the latest research showing the psychology behind this relationship that scientists have dubbed “the human-companion animal bond.” Research shows why these mainly nonverbal creatures can become surrogate children, friends, and even therapists of a sort. Current studies focused on animal intelligence, loyalty, and sensitivity are shared here. Those same qualities are shown at work in new and vital roles for companion animals, from animals in therapeutic settings to dogs teamed with soldiers, police officers, and rescuers. Anderson also explains how losing a pet can shake or shatter our mental stability, and how and why that has led to public services, funerals, and cemeteries for pets. The book closes with a discussion of the dissonance between our indulgence of some companion animals, while the suffering and maltreatment of others is ignored.
Table of Contents
Preface
Foreword by Gerald P. Koocher, Ph.D., Former President, American Psychological Association
Note to the Reader: “Pet” vs. “Companion Animal”
1. Companion Animals in America and Around the Globe
2. Genesis and Nature of the Bond
3. Why We Choose Certain Animals As Companions
4. Roles That Animals Play in Our Lives and How We Influence Each Other
5. Embedded with Humans—Animals in the Human World
6. Pets as Medicine
7. Protecting Our Companion Animals
8. When Love Hurts (Dealing with the death and grief)
9. Love Gone Bad (Animal abuse, cloning, homelessness, etc.)
Notes
Bibliography
Index