To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing
To See Them Run explores how and why Great Plains hunters have chased coyotes with greyhounds and other sight hounds since before George Armstrong Custer. Though a well-developed, long-lived, widespread, and undeniably enthralling tradition, the practice remains little known, even to those living in Oklahoma, Nebraska, and South Dakota, where the tradition is common. Coyote coursing, hunting with greyhounds launched from specially made pickup rigs, is a hobby by locals, for locals, and it has remained a quintessentially vernacular enterprise occupying a rung below the Plains’ prestige forms of animal training and interaction—namely with horses and cattle. The coyote coursing tradition provides an ideal setting for exploring the relationship between animals and the study of folklore.

The book examines the artistry, thrills, values, camaraderie, economy, and controversies of this uncommercialized and never-before-studied vernacular tradition. Through ethnographic photographs and authentic collected commentary from participants, this book uncovers how hunting dogs and coyotes both have shaped and been shaped by human aesthetic sensibilities in ongoing folkloric and biological processes. Author Eric A. Eliason and photographer Scott Squire discover deep and sophisticated local knowledge in a unique interaction with the natural ecologies of the great North American prairie.
1121843191
To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing
To See Them Run explores how and why Great Plains hunters have chased coyotes with greyhounds and other sight hounds since before George Armstrong Custer. Though a well-developed, long-lived, widespread, and undeniably enthralling tradition, the practice remains little known, even to those living in Oklahoma, Nebraska, and South Dakota, where the tradition is common. Coyote coursing, hunting with greyhounds launched from specially made pickup rigs, is a hobby by locals, for locals, and it has remained a quintessentially vernacular enterprise occupying a rung below the Plains’ prestige forms of animal training and interaction—namely with horses and cattle. The coyote coursing tradition provides an ideal setting for exploring the relationship between animals and the study of folklore.

The book examines the artistry, thrills, values, camaraderie, economy, and controversies of this uncommercialized and never-before-studied vernacular tradition. Through ethnographic photographs and authentic collected commentary from participants, this book uncovers how hunting dogs and coyotes both have shaped and been shaped by human aesthetic sensibilities in ongoing folkloric and biological processes. Author Eric A. Eliason and photographer Scott Squire discover deep and sophisticated local knowledge in a unique interaction with the natural ecologies of the great North American prairie.
25.0 In Stock
To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing

To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing

To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing

To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing

eBookEPUB Single (EPUB Single)

$25.00 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

To See Them Run explores how and why Great Plains hunters have chased coyotes with greyhounds and other sight hounds since before George Armstrong Custer. Though a well-developed, long-lived, widespread, and undeniably enthralling tradition, the practice remains little known, even to those living in Oklahoma, Nebraska, and South Dakota, where the tradition is common. Coyote coursing, hunting with greyhounds launched from specially made pickup rigs, is a hobby by locals, for locals, and it has remained a quintessentially vernacular enterprise occupying a rung below the Plains’ prestige forms of animal training and interaction—namely with horses and cattle. The coyote coursing tradition provides an ideal setting for exploring the relationship between animals and the study of folklore.

The book examines the artistry, thrills, values, camaraderie, economy, and controversies of this uncommercialized and never-before-studied vernacular tradition. Through ethnographic photographs and authentic collected commentary from participants, this book uncovers how hunting dogs and coyotes both have shaped and been shaped by human aesthetic sensibilities in ongoing folkloric and biological processes. Author Eric A. Eliason and photographer Scott Squire discover deep and sophisticated local knowledge in a unique interaction with the natural ecologies of the great North American prairie.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781496803870
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication date: 10/14/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Eric A. Eliason is professor of English at Brigham Young University. Scott Squire is a documentary photographer and filmmaker. He is a principal in NonFiction Media, the production company responsible for the 2015 Sundance-supported feature documentary Drawing the Tiger. Eliason and Squire also collaborated on Black Velvet Art and The Island of Lace: Drawn Threadwork on Saba in The Dutch Caribbean, both published by University Press of Mississippi.
Eric A. Eliason is professor of English at Brigham Young University. He is author of The Island of Lace: Drawn Threadwork on Saba in The Dutch Caribbean, To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing, and Black Velvet Art, all published by University Press of Mississippi.
Scott Squire is a documentary photographer and filmmaker. He is a principal in NonFiction Media, the production company responsible for the 2015 Sundance-supported feature documentary Drawing the Tiger. He is photographer for The Island of Lace: Drawn Threadwork on Saba in The Dutch Caribbean, Black Velvet Art, and To See Them Run: Great Plains Coyote Coursing, all published by University Press of Mississippi.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews