Hilda Kean is visiting professor at the University of Greenwich and an honorary senior research associate at University College London. Her many books include Animal Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain since 1800 and London Stories: Personal Lives, Public Histories.
The central historical event around which Kean's book revolves is shocking. . . . Contains a wealth of fascinating detail. . . . Raises sobering questions about how far attitudes of disposability towards the animals we call our companions still persist. --Times Literary Supplement The tremendous loss of human life during World War II has made this episode an unsuitable one to criticize. Kean's book brings to light an uncomfortable chapter in British history. --Wall Street Journal Kean's snapshots of life during wartime are engaging. . . . Her book suggests that history should acknowledge 'everybody' to include bodies with four legs as well as two. --New York Times Book Review This is a brilliant telling of an important but neglected story of Britain's 'People's War.' Kean's reconstruction of the unnecessary slaughter of hundreds of thousands of pet animals at the outbreak of war will live long in the reader's memory. But it is matched by her meticulous recovery of the changing aspect of animal-human relations throughout the remaining six years of conflict. --Jerry White, author of London in the Twentieth Century: A City and Its People This is a profoundly important book. Like a piece of paper folded into origami, it reveals new dimensions to a tragic subject. It reshapes our historical understanding by giving us a remarkable model of cross-species inclusivity. I want to start reading it all over again to see just how Kean pulled this off. --Carol J. Adams, author The Sexual Politics of Meat By unearthing this odd but significant moment of compassionate hysteria, Kean's book undercuts this portrayal of the resolute Empire, suggesting the terror and irrationality beneath the stiff upper lip. --Los Angeles Review of Books A multifaceted history. . . . Pursuing questions as varied as a pet's value in the years leading up to the war, how the idea of war-preparedness (or 'doing things') goaded people into acting drastically (and often pointlessly), and how the event shaped thinking on animal rights, Kean achieves an unusual psychological portrait of a society in wartime. --New Yorker For those who think everything has been said about Britain's war, here is a book that will change our perspective on the popular image of the British people calmly coping with the challenges of the home front. Kean not only brings animals into the wartime narrative in their own right, but challenges the way historians have treated the wartime experience. This is a remarkably rich and detailed history, not only reconstructing the unknown story of the animal massacre, but in the process offering a profound view of the way animals and humans interact. --Richard Overy, author of The Bombing War: Europe 1939-1945 Kean's book, which has some excellent illustrations, insightful anecdotes, and shrewd analysis, lists the ways in which domestic animals both suffered in the war and also contributed to the war effort. --Literary Review Beginning with the mass slaughter of household pets immediately after Britain's declaration of war on Germany in 1939, Kean's compelling account explores the varied ways in which domesticated animals experienced the Home Front. With the exception of what contemporaries criticized as 'the holocaust of pets, ' most of these experiences were shared by human and non-human animals. By retrieving evidence of the lives of individual companion animals, as well as by documenting the increasing official acknowledgment of their value and standing, Kean offers a fresh perspective on what has often been called the 'People's War.' --Harriet Ritvo, author most recently of Noble Cows and Hybrid Zebras: Essays on Animals and History The shocking story of why up to 750,000 animals were killed in the first week of the Second World War is the subject of a fascinating new book. --Daily Express Remarkable. . .This remarkable book begins with a shocking event: the killing of at least 400,000 pet cats and dogs in London during four days of the first week of World War II. . .Without doubt, Hilda Kean has written an original and challenging monograph whose message forces readers to rethink their attitudes about themselves and the animals around them. --Cercles This is a well-researched and well-crafted book, and by bringing animals into the wartime narrative in their right, Kean does help to reshape our historical understanding of what has often been called the People's War. . . .Kean recovers how animals and humans meaningfully interacted and, in so doing, challenges the ways historians have interpreted the wartime experience. For this reason, this is a book that should be read not only by historians of animals but also those interested in domesticity, memory, war, and British history. --Journal of British Studies In The Great Cat & Dog Massacre, Kean shows how one can take an imaginative approach to historiography for animals. . . . The interesting thing about this book, especially for interdisciplinary readers, is that it goes beyond that approach, opening up processes and possibilities for a history in which animals' subject status is foregrounded. This type of history has relevance beyond disciplinary concerns and narrative reconstructions. There is much of value to the practice and teaching of veterinary medicine in this book. --Society & Animals Clearly illustrates how the widely accepted narrative of Brits keeping calm and carrying on was not all that it was cracked up to be. Kean does a thorough job of collecting anecdotes, letters, news clippings that collectively shed light on the many experiences of pet owners, their children, vets, animal rescuers, politicians, and the animals themselves. Because this was not a phenomenon that was widely publicized and, after the war, was quickly forgotten, this book provides an important historical record. [The Great Dog and Cat Massacre] does a service to those animals who gave their lives before their time. --EcoLit Books I was completely riveted, not least by what The Great Cat And Dog Massacre tells you about our unexpectedly ambivalent attitudes towards animals. --Daily Mail