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Dogs Save
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21 April 2026

Stories about people and dogs saving one another are everywhere in US culture—on TV, in Hollywood movies, on social media, and even on bumper stickers. Yet these seemingly heartwarming stories of mutual rescue revolve around redemption through suffering, a narrative profoundly interwoven with Christian beliefs, white racial anxieties, and US national myths.
Katharine Mershon examines the unacknowledged religious underpinnings of stories about dogs, revealing deeply rooted cultural assumptions about who can be saved and how redemption ought to occur. She identifies the “canine redemption narrative” as the defining cultural script for the stories people in the United States tell about dogs and, in turn, the nation. Exposing unexamined assumptions about the relationships between people and dogs, Mershon sheds light on the central place of animals and religion in defining racial boundaries.
Dogs Save considers examples including the Michael Vick dogfighting case; Samuel Fuller’s controversial B-movie White Dog; the TV show The Dog Whisperer, from the celebrity dog trainer Cesar Millan; Laurie Anderson’s film Heart of a Dog; and Eileen Myles’s Afterglow (a dog memoir). Bringing together religious studies and animal studies, this book shows that redemption narratives shape who is allowed to survive and thrive in US society.
— Colin Dayan, author of With Dogs at the Edge of Life and Animal Quintet
In Dogs Save, Mershon reveals how the stories we tell about dogs are also stories about redemption, race, nation, and identity—stories that sometimes bring us closer to reality and sometimes distort it. Ultimately, Mershon illumines nothing less than the religious dimension of our lives with dogs—lives that include both joy and sorrow, projection and genuine intimacy. She eruditely helps us understand how dogs are symbolized, but in the end, Mershon's most demanding request is that we attend to the dogs themselves.
— Aaron Gross, author of The Question of the Animal and Religion: Theoretical Stakes, Practical Implications
Katharine Mershon offers a signal contribution to animal studies in religious history, showing how stories of redemption script human relationships to dogs. Whenever humans talk about their dogs they reflect on what lives are worth having. After you read Dogs Save, you will never think about animal freedom the same way again.
— Kathryn Lofton, author of Consuming Religion
Introduction: Redemption and the “American Dog”
Part I: On Canine Absence
1. The Classic Canine Redemption Narrative
2. The Failures of the Canine Redemption Narrative
Part II: Making Dogs Present
3. Relational Redemption
4. Troubling Redemption
Coda
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index