Introduction: Increasing Ethical Sensitivity around Fur
Andrew Linzey and Clair Linzey
Part I: Historical and Religious Perspectives
Chapter 1: From the Pleistocene to COVID-19: A Brief History of Fur
Adam Bridgen
Chapter 2: “Thou Shalt Not Use the Skins of Any Living Creature”: The Original Anti-Fur Activist, Thomas Tryon (1634–1703)
Adam Bridgen
Chapter 3: The New England Fur Trade: The Ethics of Puritan Dress in a Portrait of Lieutenant Governor William Stoughton
Linda M. Johnson
Chapter 4: The Nineteenth-Century Boycott against Feathered Hats
Robyn Hederman
Chapter 5: Corpse “Contamination” as a Religious Approach to Fur
Sidney Blankenship
Chapter 6: Of Ermines, Cats, and “the Best-Dressed Pontiff Ever”: The Ethics of Fur-Trimmed Clerical Garb
Kurt Remele
Part II: Ethical and Cultural Perspectives
Chapter 7: A Case of Wrongful Use: An Ethical Analysis of the Use of Animal Fur
Frances M. C. Robinson
Chapter 8: If a Fox Could Talk: Wittgenstein and the Calculated Silencing of Animals in Industrial Fur Production
K. York
Chapter 9: “All Fur Coat and No Knickers!” The Speciesism of Fur in Disney Media
Rebecca Rose Stanton
Chapter 10: Bringing Nonhuman Animals into Anthropologies of Fur
Jen Clements
Chapter 11: Video Killed the Animal for Fur: An Analysis of the Influence of Pop Music Culture on Perceptions about Fur
Ambrose Tinarwo
Part III: Political and Legal Perspectives
Chapter 12: Politics, Law, and Grasping the Evidence in Fur Farming: A Tale of Three Continents
Simon Brooman
Chapter 13: Legislation against Animals Reared for Fur in Brazil
Letícia Albuquerque and Gabriela Franziska Schoch Santos Carvalho
Chapter 14: Animal Welfare Standards in European Fur Production and the “WelFur” Assessment Program
Heather Pickett
Chapter 15: The Ethics of Marketing Fur to Children
Kimberly Moore
Chapter 16: Fur and Free Speech
Justin Marceau, Jess Beaulieu, Kate Sanford, and Chloe Gleichman
Chapter 17: The Myth That “Fur Is Green” and the Real Impact of the Fur Industry on the Environment
Kimberly Moore
About the Contributors