Throughout human history, nonhuman animal life and architecture have been deeply entangled, often localized around work. Early agriculture compelled a need for human and nonhuman animals to cooperate and cohabitate. Permanent shelters were created that organized early farming life and framed a human-nonhuman divide. Stories of agriculture and husbandry were spun, which became foundational elements of human mythologies and shaped what it meant to be human.
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