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Chicken
Chicken | Annie Potts
12 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
No creature has been subject to such extremes of reverence and exploitation as the chicken. Hens have been venerated as cosmic creators and roosters as solar divinities. Many cultures have found the mysteries of birth, healing, death and resurrection encapsulated in the hens egg. Yet today, most of us have nothing to do with chickens as living beings, although billions are consumed around the world every year. In Chicken Annie Potts introduces us to the vivid and astonishing world of Gallus gallus. The book traces the evolution of jungle fowl and the domestication of chickens by humans. It describes the ways in which chickens experience the world, form families and friendships, communicate with each other, play, bond, and grieve. Chicken explores cultural practices like egg-rolling, the cockfight, alectromancy, wishbone-pulling and the chicken-swinging ritual of Kapparot; discovers depictions of chickenhood in ancient and modern art, literature and film; and also showcases bizarre supernatural chickens from around the world including the Basilisk, Kikimora and Pollio Maligno. Chicken concludes with a detailed analysis of the place of chickens in the world today, and a tribute to those who educate and advocate on behalf of these birds. Numerous beautiful illustrations show the many faces (and feathers and combs and tails) of Gallus, from wild roosters in the jungles of Southeast Asia to quirky Naked-Necks and majestic Malays. There are chickens painted by Chagall and Magritte, chickens made of hair-rollers, and chickens shaped like mountains. The reader of Chicken will encounter a multitude of intriguing facts and ideas, including why the largest predator ever to walk the earth is considered the ancestor of the modern chicken, how mother hens communicate with their chicks while they're still in the egg, why Charlie Chaplins masterpiece required him to play a chicken, whether its safe to take eggs on a sea-voyage, and how chicken therapy can rejuvenate us all. This book will fascinate those already familiar with and devoted to the Gallus species, and it will open up a whole new gallinaceous world for future admirers of the intelligent and passionate chicken.
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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If you've been following my posts, you already know how much I have enjoyed this fascinating book. Warning about the chapter on industrial farming practices: it's gruesome.
Chicken is one in a series about animals published by Reaktion Books. I will look for more!

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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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Instead of a natural lifespan of up to twelve years, the typical farmed chick today will live for about six weeks.

Readaholics Omg so if I read this book, will I ever eat chicken again??? It looks amazing but I have few meats left. Lol 8y
Lindy @Readaholics Hmm. You might become finicky about the source of your chicken meat and eggs after reading this. 8y
15 likes2 comments
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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From realism to naturalism, impressionism to cubism, Dadaism to surrealism, the chicken has inspired the masters, and a surprising number of great artists have instances of chicken art in their body of work.

SaraFair Gotta read this. My neighbor has a chicken (yes, in our neighborhood) named Ruby. She is so cute and is always taking her time getting anywhere. That includes a s l o w walk around my dog's pen each night, just to irritate. 8y
Lindy @SaraFair When I've had the opportunity to get to know individual chickens, I've always been impressed by their distinctive personalities. 🐓 8y
10 likes2 comments
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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Portrayals of chickens in earlier 20th-century fiction & film cast them as augers of prosperity due to the wealth that new intensive farming practices promised to generate, while chicken characters post-1970s are more likely to be trivialized [...]

Lindy I saw this purse in the handbag museum in Amsterdam. Not sure if it trivializes the bird, or if its connotation is of wealth. 8y
Megabooks But does it have a chapter on the movie Chicken Run? Loved that! 😃😉 8y
Lindy @Ebooksandcooks To be sure! It's in the chapter on popular culture. 8y
Megabooks Yay!! 🐓🐓 8y
12 likes4 comments
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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Bahuchara Mata, Hindu goddess and patroness of the hijra (transgender and intersex) community [...] sits on a rooster, this bird symbolizing innocence.

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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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Up until the nineteenth century it was common for cockerels to be buried in the foundations of a church to keep evil at bay. As symbols of the Resurrection they were often carved on church steeples, and shaped into weather vanes, where they could turn their famed vigilance in all directions.

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Ok... You've convinced me, I need to read this book! 8y
Lindy @Riveted_Reader_Melissa It's just one fascinating thing after another. 😀🐓 8y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Lindy Yes it is, at least from the posts I've seen from you! 8y
12 likes3 comments
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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In Switzerland in 1474 a rooster found guilty of heresy after allegedly laying an egg was burned at the stake along with his egg.

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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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It is said that 'as long as women create pysanky, the powers of life prevail but when the last woman to make pysanky stops doing so, then evil will reign triumphant over Earth.'

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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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Ulisse Aldrovandi [1522-1605] : "I raised a hen who, in addition to the fact that she wandered the whole day alone through the house without the company of other hens, would not go to sleep at night anywhere except near me among my books."

EliseWhitmore A chicken after my own heart ❣ 8y
15 likes1 comment
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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In order to leave the eggshell a hatchling will 'pip' or break it with her 'egg tooth,' the sharp point projecting from the tip of the upper mandible of the chick's beak (the subsequent loss of this temporary protrusion has given rise to the phrase 'as scarce as a hen's tooth').

ReadingOver50 This book actually sounds interesting. 8y
14 likes1 comment
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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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The giant incubators invented by the ancient Egyptians - possibly to sustain the masses of labourers involved in the construction of pyramids - were capable of hatching up to 15,000 eggs at one time.

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Lindy
Chicken | Annie Potts
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I'm just starting this nonfiction book about chickens. Chapter 1: From T. rex to Transylvanian Naked Necks. (I can already tell I'm going to want to share a lot of fun facts. Be warned.) 🐓

Lindy "The humble chicken may in fact be the nearest living relative of Tyrannosaurus rex." 8y
Lindy "Protein traces recovered from the soft tissue of a 68-million-year-old T. rex femur bone match most closely those of Gallus (chicken) species." 8y
shawnmooney Sounds interesting! Reminds me a little bit about this one which I have wanted to read for sometime. Maybe you know it? 8y
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Lindy @shawnmooney I haven't seen Why Did the Chicken Cross the World but Annie Potts has whetted my appetite for more about these fascinating birds, so I've added it to my TBR. 🐓 8y
shawnmooney I heard the author interviewed over a year ago and have wanted to read the book ever since. 8y
ramyasbookshelf Love all your chicken posts! Wouldn't have thought I'd be interested in a non fiction about chicken! 8y
Lindy @ramyasbookshelf Thanks. There's more! 8y
ramyasbookshelf @Lindy keep it coming! 8y
18 likes8 comments