Before Shark Week and Jaws, World War II spawned America's shark obsession
Read now →The experiences of some WWII veterans played a pivotal role in painting sharks as creatures to be feared
Janet M. Davis
University Distinguished Teaching Professor of American Studies
University of Texas at Austin
Janet Davis teaches courses in American popular culture, and social and cultural history. Her teaching areas also explore American foreign relations, animals, American social movements, transnational American Studies, and modern South Asia. She is the author of "The Circus Age: Culture and Society under the American Big Top" (2002), which won an Outstanding Academic Book Award from Choice.
In her newest book "The Gospel of Kindness," she analyzes the relationship between the growth and development of the U.S. animal welfare movement and ideologies of American benevolence and exceptionalism from the Second Great Awakening to the eve of World War II. The project pays special attention to the religious dimensions of the movement, as well as its relationship to American expansionism.
The experiences of some WWII veterans played a pivotal role in painting sharks as creatures to be feared