Foreword; Preface; Equine Mycotoxicosis; The Significance of Feed-Borne Mycotoxins in ruminant nutrition; Mycotoxicosis in Swine; Mycotoxicosis in Domestic Fowl.
Phillip Ackerman-Lieberman is Assistant Professor in the Program in Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt University. An expert in Jewish and Islamic Law, his most recent work has been as section editor for the Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World. Rakefet Zalashik is Visiting Fellow in the Corcoran Department of History at the University of Virginia, as well as Wurttemberg Guest Chair in Israel and Near Eastern Studies at the University of Heidelberg.
"Brilliantly documents the way Jews have imagined dogs and in so
doing imagined what it means to be a human, a Jew, and an Israeli.
A substantial contribution to both Jewish studies and animal
studies, the text will be valuable both to research scholars and as
an engaging resource for teaching undergraduates about the diverse
experience of Jews throughout history." --Aaron Gross, assistant
professor of theology and religious studies, University of San
Diego
"Original and learned, this collection of studies provides a
fascinating insight into a hitherto unexplored dimension of Jewish
life." --Dan Cohn-Sherbok, University of Wales
"This unique, fascinating, and entertaining book is a must read.
Evolutionary biologists, archaeologists, and paleontologists have
long argued that our four-legged friends played a key role in human
survival. Dogs developed a unique genius for sensing human
intentions as the interplay between handler and hound shaped canine
behavior and our own. Now Ackerman-Lieberman and Zalashik offer
research that provides the historical detail, scholarly stamina,
textual analysis, and captivating stories that detail the sometimes
ambivalent, but always important role of canines in Jewish history
and cultural heritage." --Glenn Yago, Hebrew University of
Jerusalem and the Milken Institute, Los Angeles
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