Introduction. Part 1. Animal Metaphors: History, Theory, Representation Headnote 1 Chapter 1 Rebecca Ann Bach, "Avian Shakespeare" Chapter 2 Daniel Brayton, "Shakespeare’s Fishponds: Matter, Metaphor, and Market" Chapter 3 Bryan Alkemeyer, "’I am the dog’: Canine Abjection, Species Reversal, and Misanthropic Satire in Two Gentlemen of Verona Chapter 4 Crystal Bartolovich, "Learning from Crab: Primitive Accumulation, Migration, Species Being " Chapter 5 Karl Steel, "Animal Behavior and Metaphor, in Shakespeare and His Fellow Dramatists" Part 2. Scales of Meaning Headnote 2 Chapter 6 Ian MacInnes, "Cow-Cross Lane and Curriers Row: Animal Networks in Early Modern England" Chapter 7 Benjamin Bertram, "’Everything exists by strife’: War and Creaturely Violence in Shakespeare’s Late Tragedies" Chapter 8 Lucinda Cole, "Zoonotic Shakespeare: Animals, Plagues, and the Medical Posthumanities" Chapter 9 Joseph Campana, "Flock, Herd, Swarm: A Shakespearean Lexicon of Creaturely Collectivity" Part 3. Animal Worlds/ Animal Language Headnote 3 Chapter 10 Keith Botelho, "Swarm Life: Shakespeare’s School of Insects" Chapter 11 Nicole Jacobs, "‘Where the Bee Sucks’: Bernardian Ecology and the Post-Reformation Animal" Chapter 12 Liza Blake and Kathryn Vomero Santos, "What Does the Wolf Say?: Wolvish Tongues and Animal Language in Coriolanus" Chapter 13 Bruce Boehrer, "Shrewd Shakespeare" Part 4. Training, Performance, and Living with Animals Headnote 4 Chapter 14 Elspeth Graham, "The Training Relationship: horses, hawks, dogs, bears and humans" Chapter 15 Todd Borlik, "Performing The Winter’s Tale in the ‘Open’: Bear Plays, Skinners’ Pageants, and the Early Modern Fur Trade Chapter 16 Julian Yates, "Counting Shakespeare’s Sheep with The Second Shepherd’s Play" Chapter 17 Laurie Shannon, "Silly Creatures: King Lear (with Sheep)" Part 5. Animal Boundaries and Identities Headnote 5 Chapter 18 Nicole Mennell, "The Lion King: Shakespeare’s Beastly Sovereigns" Chapter 19 Jennifer Reid, "‘Wearing the Horn’: Class and Community in the Shakespearean Hunt" Chapter 20 Steven Swarbrick, "On Eating--the Animal That Therefore I Am: Race and Animal Rites in Titus Andronicus" Chapter 21 Rob Wakeman, "’What’s this? what’s this?’: Stockfish and Piscine Sexuality in Measure for Measure" Chapter 22 Karen Raber, "My Palfrey, Myself: Toward a Queer Phenomenology of the Horse-Human Bond in Henry V and Beyond" Chapter 23 Erica Fudge, "‘Forgiveness, horse’: The Barbaric World of Richard II" Appendix