Tyler D. Parry (Interdisciplinary, Gender, and Ethnic Studies) published a co-authored article in the February issue of the journal Past Present. In the authors argue that canines played an integral role in colonizing North and South America, and initiating the subsequent expansion of the transatlantic slave trade throughout the Western Hemisphere. In their own words, "Examining racialized canine attacks...contextualizes representations of anti-blackness and interspecies ideas of race. An Atlantic network of breeding, training and sales facilitated the use of slave hounds in each major American slave society to subdue human property, actualize legal categories of subjugation, and build efficient economic and state regimes. This integral process is often overlooked in histories of slavery, the African Diaspora, and colonialism. By violently enforcing slavery’s regimes of racism and profit, exposing the humanity of the enslaved and depravity of enslavers, and enraging transnational abolitionists, hounds were central to the rise and fall of slavery in the Americas."
The authors procured funds to make this article "open access" and freely available to the broader public. Parry specifically benefited from the subvention funds he was awarded by UNLV's College of Liberal Arts.