EFTA00650550.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
To: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: The New York Times Magazine: What Animals Are Teaching Us About Human Health
Date: Fri, 19 May 2017 22:04:19 +0000
View in Browser
Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your address book.
QThe New York limes
[
610,The New York
Times
Friday, May 19, 2017
NYTimes.com »
"Animals don't exist in order to teach us things," writes Helen Macdonald, in the
introductory essay for this week's issue — "but that is what they have always done,
and most of what they teach us is what we think we know about ourselves." The
stories in this issue focus on what animals have shown us about human health,
but many of them also challenge how we see the nonhuman creatures around us.
We asked a selection of writers — Joyce Carol Oates, Junot Diaz, Mohsin Hamid,
Karen Russell, Hanya Yanagihara, Daniel Engber, Moises Velasquez-Manoff,
Emily Anthes — to look from new angles at the other beings we share our planet
with: our best friends, our research subjects, our nuisances, our inspirations our
family.
Elsewhere in the magazine, Carina Chocano writes about the Fyre Festival — and
the ways everyday life is starting to resemble a never-ending scam. Gary Rivlin
explores the notion of "Grades 13 and 14," time tacked onto the end of high school
to prepare our students for better jobs. And Gabrielle Hamilton shares a recipe for
chowder-soaked toast, a dish born when she and her wife decided to run "her"
restaurant, Prune, together — as "their" restaurant.
Happy reading,
Jake Silverstein
Editor in Chief
EFTA00650550
IPA family photograph of the writer with house sparrows in 1979.
A family photograph of the writer with house sparrows in 1979. Alisdair Macdonald
THE HEALTH ISSUE
What Animals Taught Me About
Being Human
Li)
\id)
Surrounding myself with animals to feel less alone was a mistake: The greatest comfort is in
knowing their lives are not about us at all.
cr., ncrr I.n.en form. Sr.:
THE HEALTH ISSUE
A Pet Tortoise Who Will
Outlive Us All
li).
\ANAGIIIARA
It's humbling to care for an animal that reminds
you, each day, of your own imminent death.
m
P, i.,ii tian for The New Yorklimes
THE HEALTH ISSUE
The Mystery of the
Wasting House-Cats
AN I Ili
Forty years ago, feline hyperthyroidism was
virtually nonexistent. Now it's an epidemic — and
some scientists think a class of everyday chemicals
might be to blame.
WELL
Of Mice and Mindfulness
lip GREItlIEN REV NOI.DS
Putting mice into something like a meditative state may shed light
on the human brain.
EFTA00650551
NOTEBOOK
`We Choose Each Other Over and
Over Because We Want to': Readers
Share Their Open-Marriage Stories
By JEANNIE
.
More than 3oo readers weighed in on whether an open marriage is
a happier marriage based on their personal experience.
ADVERTISEMENT
Ili
(Zoie Brogdon, Age 12: 'I tried soccer, which I hated. I tried track, and there was
just mean people. I tried tennis, same thing, mean people. With horses, there still
are mean people, but I don't care. Because I have my horse right next to me."
Zoie Brogdon, Age 12: "I tried soccer, which I hated. I tried track, and there was just mean people. I tried
tennis, same thing, mean people. With horses, there still are mean people, but I don't care. Because I have my
horse right next to me." Ilona Szwarc for The New York Times
THE HEALTH ISSUE
Why Close Encounters With
Animals Soothe Us
• ILONA SZWARC AND 1 I
Compton Jr. Posse in Los Angeles, which brings inner-city children and horses together,
reveals the therapeutic power of communing with fellow sentient beings.
EFTA00650552
atherine Ledner for the New York 1
THE HEALTH ISSUE
The Genetics of Pooched-
Out Pooches
By ROXANNE KI JAMS!
A mutation in some obesity-prone dog breeds
might reveal new risk factors for obesity in
humans — and perhaps give rise to new drugs.
Illustration by Kelsey Dake
THE HEALTH ISSUE
The Self-Medicating
Animal
By MOISES VELASQUEZ-MANOFF
What can we learn from chimps and sheep and
maybe even insects that practice medicine on
themselves?
THE HEALTH ISSUE
When the Lab Rat Is a Snake
Why Burmese pythons may be the best way to study diabetes, heart
disease and the protective effects of gastric-bypass surgery in
humans.
FIRST WORDS
From Wells Fargo to Fyre Festival,
the Scam Economy Is Entering Its
Baroque Phase
B) CARINA CI IOCANO
We all may be losing sight of the difference between appearance
and reality — between what we advertise and what we do.
ADVERTISEMENT
EFTA00650553
GJ
GJ
FOLLOW NYTimes
Tw @nytmag
Get more NYTimes.com newsletters »
Get unlimited access to NYTimes.com and our
NYTimes apps. Subscribe
ABOUT THIS EMAIL
You received this message because you signed up for NYlimes.com's The New York Times Magazine newsletter.
Unsubscribe
Manage Subscriptions
Change Your Email
Privacy Policy
Contact
Advertise
Copyright 2017 The New York Times Company
620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018
rr
EFTA00650554
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Extracted Information
Dates
Email Addresses
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00650550.pdf |
| File Size | 215.7 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 5,039 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:18:17.964344 |