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The concept of this book arises from a symposium entitled “Human-Macaque Interactions: Traditional and Modern Perspectives on Cooperation and Conflict ” organized at the 23rd Congress of the International Primatological Society, that was held in Kyoto in September 2010. The symposium highlighted the many aspects of human-macaque relations and some of the participants were invited to contribute to this volume. The volume will include about 11 chapters by a variety of international authors and some excerpts from published literature that illustrate cultural notions of macaques. Contributions from invited authors will engage with four main perspectives – traditional views of macaques, cooperative relationships between humans and macaques, current scenarios of human-macaque conflict, and how living with and beside humans has affected macaques. Authors will address these concerns through their research findings and reviews of their work on the Asian, and the lone African, macaques. ​




Most successful among the non-human primates in terms of geographical distribution and adaptability to ecological habitats, macaques have existed for many thousands of years in close contact with modern humans, the only primate more successful than them. Centuries-old literary works attest to the fact that macaques have always been an intrinsic part of human lives and imaginations. In their interactions with humans, macaques play multiple roles that often transcend the boundaries of categorization. They are often, simultaneously, wildlife and domestic pets, sentient beings and experimental subjects, crop-raiding pests and religious symbols. In many parts of the tropics, macaques are an economic resource for human communities, as they provide meat and money through tourism and the animal trade. Equally, they cause much damage and bring about great economic losses due to their crop- and house-raiding tendencies. A more recent cause for alarm has been the possibility of transmission of diseases to humans due to contact with macaques. Across Asia, macaques, perhaps more than any other animal species, exemplify the multiple facets of synurbization and the conservation problems of commensal species.

Humans and macaques associate in rather remarkable ways, and this volume explores the tone and nature of those human-macaque connections by focusing on various forms of interactions between macaques and humans, change in human attitudes vis-`-vis macaques over the ages, cultural views on macaques, human-macaque conflict and its conservation implications. Its holistic perspective of the myriad aspects that illustrate the singular relationship between men and macaques makes it essential reading not only for primatologists and anthropologists but also for anyone interested in the intricacies of human-animal relations.




Most successful among the non-human primates in terms of geographical distribution and adaptability to ecological habitats, macaques have existed for many thousands of years in close contact with modern humans, the only primate more successful than them. Centuries-old literary works attest to the fact that macaques have always been an intrinsic part of human lives and imaginations. In their interactions with humans, macaques play multiple roles that often transcend the boundaries of categorization. They are often, simultaneously, wildlife and domestic pets, sentient beings and experimental subjects, crop-raiding pests and religious symbols. In many parts of the tropics, macaques are an economic resource for human communities, as they provide meat and money through tourism and the animal trade. Equally, they cause much damage and bring about great economic losses due to their crop- and house-raiding tendencies. A more recent cause for alarm has been the possibility of transmission of diseases to humans due to contact with macaques. Across Asia, macaques, perhaps more than any other animal species, exemplify the multiple facets of synurbization and the conservation problems of commensal species.

Humans and macaques associate in rather remarkable ways, and this volume explores the tone and nature of those human-macaque connections by focusing on various forms of interactions between macaques and humans, change in human attitudes vis-`-vis macaques over the ages, cultural views on macaques, human-macaque conflict and its conservation implications. Its holistic perspective of the myriad aspects that illustrate the singular relationship between men and macaques makes it essential reading not only for primatologists and anthropologists but also for anyone interested in the intricacies of human-animal relations.


Content:
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
The Gulf Between Men and Monkeys....Pages 3-15
Front Matter....Pages 17-17
The Nature of Love....Pages 19-31
The Japanese and Japanese Monkeys: Dissonant Neighbors Seeking Accommodation in a Shared Habitat....Pages 33-51
Songs of Monkeys: Representation of Macaques in Classical Tamil Poetry....Pages 53-68
Front Matter....Pages 69-69
Macaques and Biomedicine: Notes on Decolonization, Polio, and Changing Representations of Indian Rhesus in the United States, 1930–1960....Pages 71-91
Macaque Tourism: Implications for Their Management and Conservation....Pages 93-105
Pets, Property, and Partners: Macaques as Commodities in the Human-Other Primate Interface....Pages 107-123
Front Matter....Pages 125-125
Gaadli....Pages 127-133
Macaque–Human Interactions in Past and Present-Day Sri Lanka....Pages 135-148
Monyet Yang Dihargai, Monyet Yang Dibenci: The Human-Macaque Interface in Indonesia....Pages 149-166
Out of Asia: The Singular Case of the Barbary Macaque....Pages 167-183
Front Matter....Pages 185-185
The Monkey in the Town’s Commons, Revisited: An Anthropogenic History of the Indian Bonnet Macaque....Pages 187-208
Anthropogenic Influences on Macaque Populations and Their Genetic Consequences....Pages 209-224
Managing Humans, Managing Macaques: Human–Macaque Conflict in Asia and Africa....Pages 225-250
Back Matter....Pages 251-256


Most successful among the non-human primates in terms of geographical distribution and adaptability to ecological habitats, macaques have existed for many thousands of years in close contact with modern humans, the only primate more successful than them. Centuries-old literary works attest to the fact that macaques have always been an intrinsic part of human lives and imaginations. In their interactions with humans, macaques play multiple roles that often transcend the boundaries of categorization. They are often, simultaneously, wildlife and domestic pets, sentient beings and experimental subjects, crop-raiding pests and religious symbols. In many parts of the tropics, macaques are an economic resource for human communities, as they provide meat and money through tourism and the animal trade. Equally, they cause much damage and bring about great economic losses due to their crop- and house-raiding tendencies. A more recent cause for alarm has been the possibility of transmission of diseases to humans due to contact with macaques. Across Asia, macaques, perhaps more than any other animal species, exemplify the multiple facets of synurbization and the conservation problems of commensal species.

Humans and macaques associate in rather remarkable ways, and this volume explores the tone and nature of those human-macaque connections by focusing on various forms of interactions between macaques and humans, change in human attitudes vis-`-vis macaques over the ages, cultural views on macaques, human-macaque conflict and its conservation implications. Its holistic perspective of the myriad aspects that illustrate the singular relationship between men and macaques makes it essential reading not only for primatologists and anthropologists but also for anyone interested in the intricacies of human-animal relations.


Content:
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
The Gulf Between Men and Monkeys....Pages 3-15
Front Matter....Pages 17-17
The Nature of Love....Pages 19-31
The Japanese and Japanese Monkeys: Dissonant Neighbors Seeking Accommodation in a Shared Habitat....Pages 33-51
Songs of Monkeys: Representation of Macaques in Classical Tamil Poetry....Pages 53-68
Front Matter....Pages 69-69
Macaques and Biomedicine: Notes on Decolonization, Polio, and Changing Representations of Indian Rhesus in the United States, 1930–1960....Pages 71-91
Macaque Tourism: Implications for Their Management and Conservation....Pages 93-105
Pets, Property, and Partners: Macaques as Commodities in the Human-Other Primate Interface....Pages 107-123
Front Matter....Pages 125-125
Gaadli....Pages 127-133
Macaque–Human Interactions in Past and Present-Day Sri Lanka....Pages 135-148
Monyet Yang Dihargai, Monyet Yang Dibenci: The Human-Macaque Interface in Indonesia....Pages 149-166
Out of Asia: The Singular Case of the Barbary Macaque....Pages 167-183
Front Matter....Pages 185-185
The Monkey in the Town’s Commons, Revisited: An Anthropogenic History of the Indian Bonnet Macaque....Pages 187-208
Anthropogenic Influences on Macaque Populations and Their Genetic Consequences....Pages 209-224
Managing Humans, Managing Macaques: Human–Macaque Conflict in Asia and Africa....Pages 225-250
Back Matter....Pages 251-256
....
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