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Myxomatosis: A History of Pest Control and the Rabbit (International Library of Twentieth Century History)
 
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Myxomatosis: A History of Pest Control and the Rabbit (International Library of Twentieth Century History) [Hardcover]

Peter W.J. Bartrip (Author)

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Book Description

September 16, 2008 1845115724 978-1845115722

Myxomatosis, a viral disease of the European wild rabbit, reached Britain in 1953. Within a year it had killed tens of millions of rabbits from Kent to the Shetlands. Winston Churchill, the Archbishop of York and members of the public raised on the tales of Beatrix Potter were appalled, deploring the loss of a cheap nutritional foodstuff. Many farmers, on the other hand, welcomed the demise of a serious agricultural pest and deliberately spread the disease. The government resisted appeals to legislate against the deliberate spreading of the disease until passing the 1954 Pests Act, as a result by 1955 some 90% of the UK rabbit population had been wiped out.

Britain’s myxomatosis outbreak has hitherto attracted little historical attention. In the first book dedicated to this subject, Peter Bartrip examines how the disease reached and spread in the UK. He argues that it was not the government who was responsible, as many thought at the time, but for the first time Bartrip names the individual who may have deliberately brought myxomatosis from France. Bartrip tracks the response of government and other interested parties and considers the impact of rabbit de-population on agriculture and the natural environment. The cultural significance of this disease raises topical and controversial issues which are important if we are to learn lessons from more recent animal disease epidemics such as foot and mouth, BSE and H5N1 avian influenza.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“well-argued. brilliantly researched and thoroughly revisionist.” -- Professor Steven King, Director of the Centre for Health, Medicine and Society, Oxford Brookes University

“an important contribution to the history of animal disease and the reactions to it, official and popular, but should also find a wider readership among those with interests  in animal rights; the history of the English countryside; the history of environmentalism; and the history of the British civil service.” -- Professor John Stewart, Department of History, Oxford Brookes University

"[Bartrip] presents a detailed chronology of rabbit myxomatosis in Great Britain during the 1950s... this interesting book will appeal to agriculturalists, environmentalists, and anyone charged with the control of wildlife disease... Recommended." —CHOICE

About the Author

Peter Bartrip is Reader in History at University College Northampton and Research Associate at the Center for Socio-Legal Studies in Oxford.


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