Volume 12, Issue 4, 2014
Journal for Critical Animal Studies
ISSN: 1948-352X
Journal for Critical Animal Studies Editorial Executive Board
_____________________________________________________________________________
Editors
Dr. Susan Thomas
susanveganthomas@aol.com
Dr. Lindgren Johnson
lindgrenhalejosnson@gmail.com
Associate Editor
Dr. Mary Trachsel
mary-trachsel@uiowa.edu
Media Editor
Adam Weizenfeld
adam.weizenfeld@gmail.com
Editorial Board
For a complete list of the members of the Editorial Board please see the JCAS link on the
Institute for Critical Animal Studies website: http://www.criticalanimalstudies.org/?page_id=393
Cover Art
Photograph from We Animals (www.weanimals.org) by Jo-Anne McArthur, with permission.
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JCAS Volume 12, Issue 4, December 2014
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Issue Introduction……………………………………………………………………………...1-4
ESSAYS
Analyzing Categories: Harvey Sacks and Critical Animal Studies
Carmen Dell’Aversano ………………………………………………………………………..5-20
Behaving Like Animals: Shame and the Human-Animal Border in The Unbearable
Lightness of Being and Disgrace.
Daniella Cádiz Bedini ……………………………………………………………………….21-53
Fishing in Fiction: A Critical Animal Studies Analysis of Fishing in Two Examples of
Popular Fishing Literature
Donelle Gadenne …………………………………………………………………………….54-78
“This Image Cannot be Displayed”: Critical Visual Pedagogy and Images from
Factory Farms
Troy A. Martin …………………………………………………..…………………………79-104
Stray Philosophy: Human-Dog Observations on Language, Freedom and Politics
Eva Meijer ………………………………………………………………………………...105-135
FILM REVIEWS
The Raw, the Cooked, and the Scavenged
Review: Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012)
Lucinda Cole ………………………………………………………………………………136-147
Review: Maximum Tolerated Dose (2012)
Justin Kay …………………………………………………………………………………148-156
BOOK REVIEWS
Review: Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication
(2013), Ed. Emily Plec
Alex C. Parrish ....................................................................................................................157-164
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Review: On Their Own Terms (2010), Lee Hall
Anastasia Yarbrough ……………………………………………………………………...165-177
JCAS Submission Guidelines …………………………………………………………..178-179
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Issue Introduction
Containing essays ranging from the highly academic to the very personal, this issue of
JCAS demonstrates the myriad ways that critical animal studies continues to develop. In
“Analyzing Categories: Harvey Sacks and Critical Animal Studies,” Carmen Dell’Aversano
seeks to develop her argument regarding the “animal queer,” a term she has coined and one
which refers to “humans who, in their self-definition, question and cross barriers pertaining not
to sex or gender but of species.” Working with linguist Harvey Sacks’s theory of “categorybound activities,” Dell’Aversano explores the all-too-familiar statement “I could never give up
meat” as one reflective of these “‘category-bound activities’ that assume and reiterate the
‘naturalness’ and ‘normalcy’ of an exploitative relationship with ‘animals.’”
In “Behaving Like Animals: Shame and the Human-Animal Border in Milan Kundera’s
The Unbearable Lightness of Being and J.M. Coetzee’s Disgrace,” Daniella Cádiz Bedini
engages theories of shame in the construction of the human and the animal. Drawing on various
readings of shame in Genesis’ Garden of Eden, she then moves on to examine “the ways these
two texts interpret the nebulous border between human and animal precisely via a preoccupation
with shame and the body,” arguing that “both offer us an interpretation of shame and awareness
that expands the narrow confines of the human and instead exposes shame as a form of public
vulnerability—one that is not limited to the human, yet is predetermined by it.” Bedini ultimately
claims that “these novels not only challenge the human-animal divide but also offer us a different
practical model with which to engage with non-human animals, and with lives not considered
normatively ‘human.’”
Our second literary analysis, Donelle Gadenne’s “Fishing in Fiction: A Human-Animal
Studies Analysis of Fishing in Two Examples of Popular Fishing Literature,” dovetails with
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Bedini’s essay in its attention to the religious symbology of human exceptionalism. Examining
two novels, Norman Maclean’s A River Runs Through It and David James Duncan’s The River
Why, “Fishing in Fiction” discusses the ways these novels both perpetuate the supposed
sacredness of fishing (one only need think, within Christianity, of how many disciples were
fishermen or of Jesus’ feeding the multitude) and, occasionally, resist such a naturalized
violence. While animal slaughter—specifically, of quadrupeds—has a long history of sanctified
sacrifice, this essay shows how fishing, though it has not traditionally been explicitly ritualized
via sacrifice, also carries with it religious symbology that arguably condones violence.
Troy Martin’s “‘This Image Cannot Be Displayed’: Critical Visual Pedagogy and Images
from Factory Farms” is interested in what he calls the “ethical anxiety” that often results from
viewing graphic images of abused animals. Martin explores the “pedagogical possibilities and
limitations” of such images distributed by various animal rights and welfare organizations—and
the ethics of their aesthetics. Considering the work of scholars such as Susan Sontag, Paolo
Freire, and Shoshana Felman, Martin’s essay movingly discusses the ways that a response of
“ethical anxiety” and even crisis to these images may be productive—or stultifying. While the
distribution of such materials “may elevate awareness of industry practice in public
consciousness, there is no straight path between public awareness and social change…critical
pedagogy, in both theory and practice, may help educators and activists navigate this
quandary.”While Dell’Aversano considers the ways categories of difference are constructed and
maintained (“I could never give up meat”), Martin wrestles with responses of confusion and
equivocation to images of animal suffering, considering a repeated statement of his own mother,
who “often mentions that she could be a vegetarian.” Martin describes how his mother, after
viewing an ASPCA ad
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sent the organization a donation with a note to express how upset she was with them for
showing suffering animals on TV. She may align her sympathies with animals in factory
farms but falls short of eliminating meat from her diet. She frequently orders chicken or
fish, but not beef or pork, at restaurants. When meals arrive she sometimes remarks that
my vegetarian dish looks and tastes better than hers. Is this performance for me? Do I
remind her of her own rapprochement? My mother is neither wholly unaware of
conditions in factory farms nor has she been fooled by the tidy appearances of packaged
meat. Rather, I suspect she thinks about meat consumption from an emotional
constellation of uncertainty.
Martin’s piece beautifully and movingly explores the personal disappointment of such a response
as he also tries to consider the possibilities for ethical action—and the pedagogical
responsibilities—that lie in such a “constellation of uncertainty.”
Finally, in “Stray Philosophy: Human-Dog Observations on Language, Freedom, and
Politics,” Eva Meijer explores her first three months living with Olli, a former Romanian shelter
dog who came to live with her in the Netherlands. During this transition period the two worked
together to create a common language, habits, and a certain level of freedom for Olli, thus
constructing “a common world as well as a way to express that world, which changed both dog
and human.”
Meijer pays particular attention to the politics of the leash, conceding its unfortunate legal
necessity in Amsterdam at the same time that she explores how the leash potentially functions as
a mutual tool of communication. While the leash can certainly become a weapon of oppression,
it can also enable communication. The essay also considers Olli’s “political agency as a former
stray dog, both on the micro- and macro level. By emphasizing Olli’s perspective and actions,
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the paper also aims to explore ways to move beyond anthropocentrism in philosophy.” Meijer
ultimately aims not only to illustrate the ways she and Olli came to know each other—and the
pleasurable work involved in such communication—but also to raise awareness regarding shelter
animal rescue transport in Europe.
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Essays
Analyzing Categories: Harvey Sacks and Critical Animal Studies
Carmen Dell’Aversano*
Abstract: This paper is a development of my argument for animal queer and aims to conduct an
analysis of some critical animal studies issues in queer terms. In order to do so it pursues queer’s
definitional concern with categories through Harvey Sacks’s concept of “category-bound
activities.” Connecting CAS, queer and Sacks’s work has the theoretical effect of making queer
theory more general, more abstract and more rigorous, and the political effect of extending the
scope of queer theory and politics to animal rights issues. The example I explore in the essay—
the statement “I could never give up meat”—is of urgent political and theoretical relevance in
animal advocacy, and therefore of interest to critical animal studies.
Keywords: Critical Animal studies, Membership Categorization Analysis, Queer studies
It is usually at the edges where the great tectonic plates of theory meet and shift
that we find the most dramatic developments and upheavals.
– Val Plumwood
For efficient subordination, what’s wanted is that the structure not only not
appear to be a cultural artifact kept in place by human decision or custom, but
that it appear natural—that it appear to be a quite direct consequence of the facts
about the beast which are beyond the scope of human manipulation or revision. It
must seem natural that individuals of the one category are dominated by
individuals of the other and that as groups, the one dominates the other.
– Marilyn Frye
This paper presents a small but significant part of a much larger and more complex
argument which I plan to develop fully in a book. Here I will be concerned with three issues: the
first is the relevance of queer theory to critical animal studies, the second is the relevance of the
*
Carmen Dell'Aversano teaches at Pisa university (Italy) and in several therapist training institutes. She has
published in several fields such as literary theory and criticism, psychology, radical constructivism, queer theory and
critical animal studies. She has been an animal rights activist at both the local and the national level in Italy for the
last 25 years. Contact information: aversano@angl.unipi.it
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work of American linguist Harvey Sacks to queer theory, and the third is the application of one
of Sacks’s most original theoretical concepts to one particularly important critical animal studies
issue. I will address the first two issues very briefly, and concentrate on the third at greater
length.
I suppose I had better state at the outset that I do not believe that animal studies are a
good place to preach or practice “scientific neutrality.” Not only because no such thing exists
since, as Humberto Maturana famously put it, “everything is said by an observer” (65) and no
observer, since they occupy a definite place in the universe and can only make observations from
that vantage point, can ever be neutral, but also, and most importantly, because what passes as
“neutrality” is invariably compliance with, and complacency about, the status quo:
We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence
encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere. (Wiesel)
However, I find the insistence on “neutrality” (which, especially after the rise of critical animal
studies, has become a staple of debates in the animal studies field), disturbing not only for ethical
and political reasons but most of all for its gnoseological implications: the hallmark of an
intellectual, and the most important tool of scholarly inquiry, is what Musil memorably called a
"sense of possibility," 1 "a constructive will and a conscious utopianism which does not shy away
from reality but treats it as a task and as an invention."2 Appeals to “neutrality” (which are for
some reason pervasively frequent in animal studies, but curiously absent in gender studies, race
relation studies, subaltern studies and other fields which – like animal studies – explore
relationships shaped by a structural imbalance of power) therefore demonstrate not only a
depressing lack of moral courage but also (and this is far more alarming in an intellectual
context) a crucial failure of philosophical imagination.
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Historically, queer theory and queer studies have engaged primarily with issues relating
to sex and gender, so much so indeed that the acronym LGBT (referring to lesbian, gay, bisexual
and trans persons) is often expanded with Q for "queer." However, the meaning of queer cannot
be linked to, or subsumed under, any single identity category or cluster of categories. This is
because queer’s theoretical mission is the questioning of categories as such and the
denaturalization of the performances through which categories acquire social existence.
Therefore any endeavour, theoretical, political or personal, through which prevalent categories
are questioned, resisted and disrupted qualifies as queer.
In my own work in critical animal studies I have applied the category of queer to humans
who, in their theoretical, political and personal stances, question, resist and disrupt prevalent
categories not of sex and gender but of species. Some humans’ most primitive instinct, deepest
need and most heartfelt conviction is to identify primarily with non-humans, to form their most
lasting and most vital bonds with non-humans and to empathize with, and support, non-humans
in preference to humans. These people dare (or cannot help but) question the most entrenched
and most pervasive social expectations regulating the performance of social roles, and the
socially sanctioned flow of emotions; they cross the most basic and unquestioned identitarian
barrier in human cultures, the one which divides humans from non-humans. By all definitions of
the word, this makes them queer. Even though these people do not necessarily identify with any
sexual minority, the ridicule, marginalization and oppression that they face is an apt and
productive topic for a queer analysis. I have therefore coined the definition “animal queer” to
refer to humans who, in their self-definition, question and cross barriers pertaining not to sex or
gender but of species (Dell’Aversano).
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After singling out, defining and describing animal queer I became interested in
conducting a comprehensive and rigorous analysis of some key critical animal studies issues in
queer terms. Because queer is fundamentally concerned with the questioning of categories and
the denaturalization of performances, I started investigating original and productive approaches
to issues of categorization and to the analysis of performances, and I came across the work of
American sociologist and linguist Harvey Sacks.
In the Sixties, while he was laying the groundwork for what would eventually become
conversation analysis, Sacks devoted a large share of his analytical acumen and of his theoretical
creativity to analyzing the way members of a society are categorized and to the deconstruction of
normalcy, which he defined not as a trait but as an activity, as “work” (Sacks 1984).3 I realized
that this approach exactly parallels, over twenty years in advance, the denaturalization Butler
would accomplish through the fortunate term “performance,”4 and that Sacks’s work on social
categories could provide a rigorous and productive foundation for a queer analysis of the most
diverse issues. Sacks’s work illuminates the way categories and performances work in general
and in the abstract: his analytic tools and concepts can therefore help queer theory expand its
focus beyond the categories and performances which queer analyses have customarily addressed
so far, those pertaining to sex and gender.
My own work in particular aims at connecting queer theory, Sacks’s work on categories,
and critical animal studies in two ways: first, by generalizing queer theory to an overall
questioning of categories and performances through a systematic application of Sacks’s
concepts; and second, by extending its scope to a radical questioning of the human-animal binary
carried out by means of Sacks’s theoretical tools. The connection I envision between queer,
Sacks and critical animal studies has therefore two different but complementary aims: one
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theoretical and one political. The theoretical aim is making queer theory more general, more
abstract and more rigorous through a systematic application of Sacks’s work on categories; the
political aim is to extend the scope of queer theory and politics to animal rights issues.
In this paper I will focus on a single issue and will explore it by means of a number of
concepts and tools from Sacks's Lectures on Conversation, which will shed light on the
foundations of the relationship between humans and nonhumans, and show the role that mastery
of other species, speciesism, and, most particularly, the exploitation of animals for food, play in
building and strengthening our identity as humans, the cohesion of human societies and the
coherence of human cultures.
The example I have selected is of urgent political and theoretical relevance in animal
advocacy, and therefore of momentous interest to critical animal studies: the statement “I could
never give up meat.”
“I could never give up meat.” Animal rights activists are used to receiving this answer
from the vast majority of omnivores whenever they attempt to confront them with the atrocities
intrinsic to animal exploitation. The reasons behind this attitude are certainly numerous, and
probably differ considerably from person to person. For all its linguistic and lexical simplicity,
the statement “I could never give up meat” is a locus of baffling complexity, and consequently
one that critical animal studies must confront with every methodological tool at its disposal if
vegan advocacy is to prove effective.
I would like to contribute to this urgent discussion by analyzing the “I could never give
up meat” response through the lens of one of the most important theoretical concepts in Sacks’s
work on categories, that of “category-bound activity.”5
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One major achievement of Sacks’s analysis of categories is the insight that social
knowledge is stored largely in terms of activities that are considered typical of given categories,
which members of those categories can perform “naturally,” with no need for justification or
explanation, and which can consequently be used to identify members of those categories.6 If we
connect Sacks’s concept of category-bound activity with Butler’s concept of performance, we
can observe that category-bound activities play a major role in constituting and defining social
subjects and in representing them as “natural”: what Butler refers to as the performance of social
identities takes place through what Sacks refers to as category-bound activities. Because of their
differential distribution among different categories (adult/child, man/woman, human/animal…)
category-bound activities have the function and the effect of representing as basic and natural the
categories which are actually the outcome and the result of their repetition. Therefore categorybound activities are a basic component of the performance of the various socially recognized
forms of identity, from age or profession to class, gender or species.
Like all other categories, “humanity” is made up of, and can be dissolved into, myriad
multifarious, minute and all-encompassing activities whose ubiquitousness and pervasiveness
guarantee at the same time their own naturalness and that of the performance they constitute and
uphold. Their bewildering variety, which spans all history and all cultures, should not, however,
lead us to overlook one basic fact. Social categories (like all concepts) are only defined through
opposition; this means that, at the most fundamental level, the human is, and can only be, known,
experienced and performed in its ever-present, though often tacit, opposition to the nonhuman.
Our relationship to non-human animals therefore plays a crucial role in the construction of the
fundamental part of our identity, our “humanity.” Consequently, the activities through which our
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relationship to nonhuman animals is performed make up the core of the category-bound activities
which define humanity.
In all times and places, these activities entail, to a greater or lesser degree, the attitudes
which ecofeminist theorist Val Plumwood subsumed under the seminal concept of “mastery.”
Thus mastery, of the nonhuman in general and of animals in particular, turns out to be the
activity bound to the category “human” at the most general and most fundamental level; always,
in all times and places, mastery defines the human through its opposition to the “animal” and
through the oppression of “animals.”
In her 1993 book Feminism and the Mastery of Nature, Plumwood specifies five
conceptual and cultural devices which enable and define the performance of mastery:
1 Backgrounding (denial) (48-49)
2 Radical exclusion (hyperseparation) (49-52)
3 Incorporation (relational definition) (52)
4 Instrumentalism (objectification) (53)
5. Homogenisation or stereotyping (53-55)
These five features prove extremely useful in pinpointing the specific ways in which the
relationship between humans and “animals” is shaped by the performance of a huge number and
variety of mundane, sometimes scarcely perceptible, activities which, in all sorts of concrete
contexts and real-life situations, make up and define the general and overarching, but also
relatively abstract, category-bound activity of mastery. Plumwood’s analysis focuses on Western
culture; in other cultures one or more of the five components of mastery may be less pervasive,
or even absent. However, insofar as all human cultures posit an unbridgeable gap between
humans and animals, routinely and unthinkingly use animals as means for human ends and
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conceive of humanity as the ultimate form and source of value, the role of mastery as the
category-bound activity which defines humanity is omnipresent and unquestioned. Far more than
the prohibition of incest (which has known exceptions in various societies and circumstances),
mastery is the true cultural universal spanning all human societies regardless of time and place,
first and foremost, of course, that of the anthropologists, who have never noticed it because they
too consider it absolutely natural and logically necessary.7
Plumwood’s analysis of the five components of mastery allows us to perceive how
mastery as an abstract and general attitude gives rise to concrete and particular category-bound
activities. Today we will only have time to look very briefly at one of these five features,
instrumentalism or objectification.
Instrumentalism defines the other as a means to the master’s ends. Either the other’s ends
are not accorded equal consideration with those of the master, but are subordinated to the
master’s convenience, expediency or whims, or the other is assumed not to have interests and
aims of her own and is defined simply as an instrument for the master, and evaluated purely in
terms of the master’s purposes. Her very existence is justified only by her usefulness to the
master and is evaluated only on the master’s terms: a wife, a slave or a horse are “good” or “bad”
according to how well they serve and satisfy the master’s needs; in the most extreme case, their
life has no intrinsic value but is exclusively a resource for the master. As a consequence, the
other is excluded from ethical consideration and her plight, however extreme, is not seen as a fit
object for political action (Plumwood 53). Even though Plumwood does not show any particular
interest in the plight of animals, their theoretical (even though unacknowledged) centrality in her
argument is apparent in that only animals embody the extreme case of being "seen as outside
morality altogether" (53), so much so indeed that their lives have no intrinsic value but are
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exclusively resources for the master, to the point that those lives can be taken not as punishment
(however arbitrary) or in self-defense (however imaginary), but simply as a necessary practical
step to transform them into corpses which may be consumed.
This attitude builds the foundation of the category-bound activities which make up most
of the relations between humans and animals. From farm animals to those who are imprisoned in
research facilities, scores of billions of animals each year are bred only to be used by humans for
their own ends, which are incompatible not only with a however minimal quality of life but with
simple survival. The everyday life of all nonvegan humans is permeated by category-bound
activities which assume and reiterate the “naturalness” and “normalcy” of an instrumentalist and
exploitative relationship with “animals.”
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At the core of this exploitation, and most important for its definitory function, is meat-eating.
Eating meat normalizes the murderous oppression of other animals to the point of making it
imperceptible. Because the vast majority participates in it directly and on a daily basis, and
because the link between extreme violence against animals and thoughtless human enjoyment of
its results is so unmistakable and straightforward, meat-eating powerfully reiterates human
identity by joining all humans in a common front against animals. Meat-eating is the
fundamental act which restates, with incontrovertible clarity and absolute generality, the most
basic tenet of the shared worldview which holds our species together: its unconditional and
undisputable superiority to all others, and consequently its right of life and death on them. Eating
meat is indeed important, not for our health but for our identity.
The role of the cruelest and most violent, and at the same time most widespread and most
mundane, consequence of instrumentalism as a category-bound activity which defines human
identity also serves to explain a remarkable conceptual asymmetry. Animals who, no matter if
just potentially or in theory, threaten the life of the animals we feed on (whether by breeding
them or by hunting them) are considered dangerous predators, and exterminated; we, who kill
those same animals in order to feed on them, and do so on an inconceivably larger scale, do not
conceptualize ourselves as dangerous, or even simply as predators. The reason is to be sought in
the way killing in order to feed on the corpses of victims is conceptualized as a category-bound
activity: in our case, predation is a legitimate consequence of the instrumentalism deriving from
our mastery of other animals, while in the case of animals it is an illegitimate appropriation of a
category-bound activity which defines a different, and higher, category, and must therefore be
sanctioned, usually with death. The stigma associated with this appropriation reaches a paroxysm
of violence when the category-bound activity of predation is not only appropriated but subverted,
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as happens whenever an animal attacks a human. This of course happens only accidentally and
sporadically, and in a vanishingly small number of cases, especially compared to the number of
animals killed purposely and by design by humans; but in matters of category definition
quantitative details do not matter: the mere possibility of a subversion of the roles in the
predator-prey relationship is intolerable, because it challenges a fundamental component of
humanity. (It goes without saying that a rational consideration of the danger posed by “wild
animals” plays no role in the hysterical reactions to the possibility of them attacking humans: the
number of people killed in car crashes is immeasurably larger than that of those killed by
animals, but nobody seriously suggests to deal with car crashes by eradicating motor vehicles.)
It is extremely interesting to note that the role of our murderous mastery of other animals
as the category-bound activity which defines the category of humanity stands in stark contrast to
the self-conceptualization of our species. Despite the inconceivable number of animals we kill
for the most diverse and frivolous purposes, we do not think of ourselves as predators. Indeed, a
large number of highly successful cultural artifacts, like Jaws or Alien, work by appealing to our
ever-present disposition to conceptualize ourselves as preys. The self-concept of our species is
thus revealed as the foundation and the prototypical case of false consciousness. By assuming the
exploitation and murder of other animals as the category-bound activity of humanity we have
divested it not only of any ethical questionability but of any ethical meaning, and of its very
essence. Not only do we find it impossible to critically question our predatory activity: we find it
impossible to conceptualize it as such. This allows us to divorce our self-representation as
humans from any factual basis. We humans are predators but we conceive of ourselves as preys.
Our humanity is defined simultaneously by the continuous and massive practice of predation and
by the pervasive, absolute, often hysterical refusal to acknowledge it, and to face its moral
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consequences; by our inconceivably huge and inexhaustibly inventive exploitation of our preys
and by our non-negotiable refusal to accord them that status, and consequently to accept our
identity and responsibility as predators. The category-bound activity which defines us as humans
is therefore not simply predation, but a logical contradiction and ethical monstrosity we could
ironically label “innocent predation.”
This is all the more meaningful since our species is the only one that, thanks to its
complete emancipation from “the state of nature” and to the lucky evolutionary quirk that makes
it possible for us to thrive on a vegan diet, could realistically choose to locate itself completely
outside the predator/prey binary, and thus to make the violence on which this categorical
opposition is based completely obsolete, at least as far as it was concerned. Instead, we have
chosen to define ourselves very differently. On the one hand, our self-definition extols our
ethical superiority to all other species (icastically embodied in the quintessentially questionbegging adjective “humane”); in practice the definitory category-bound activity of mastery
hinges on an unacknowledged practice of extreme and all-pervasive violence which escapes not
only all limits and all controls but, most importantly, all notice.
In our self-concept we base our right to a status superior to that of other species on our
cognitive abilities and ethical awareness; but the means through which we affirm that status
contradict this justification: the category-bound activity which defines us as superior and as
human is a predatory activity which transcends all boundaries of nature and of reason, having
pushed innumerable other species on the brink of extinction and beyond, and having endangered
not only a huge number and variety of ecosystems, but our own survival. Our self-image and the
reality of our nature are therefore implacably at odds: what really defines us as humans in
opposition to “animals” is not intelligence or compassion, but the unique and nefarious power to
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turn all other species, without distinction, into prey, using our intelligence as an instrument of
death, and ridiculing compassion whenever someone feels it. The deepest, most authentic and
most misunderstood hallmark of human superiority is aptly described by Canetti in a memorable
page of Mass and Power:
The instant of survival is the instant of power. The horror upon the sighting of death
dissolves into satisfaction, since one is not oneself the dead. He lies, the survivor stands.
It is as though a struggle had taken place and one had killed the dead oneself. In survival
each is the enemy of the other […].
The lowest form of survival is that of killing. Just as one has killed the animal one
eats, just as it lies defenceless in front of one, and one can cut it into pieces and distribute
it, as booty that he and his own will consume, so one also wants to kill the human who
stands in one’s way, who stands up against one, who stands against one as an enemy. One
wants to lay him down in order to feel that one still exists, and he no longer does. (Canetti
249, my translation )
The category-bound activity of “innocent predation” is, however, only the most visible
and most widespread example of a false consciousness which permeates and subtends all aspects
of our relationship with other animals. Because of its foundational role in the definition of the
category of humanity, this false consciousness is a central, though unacknowledged, feature of
the human condition. In our idealized self-representation we define ourselves in opposition to
other animals for our emotional and moral qualities, whose focal case is empathy towards the
weak and innocent. However, in our real everyday actions, in all times and cultures, humanity
manifests itself through category-bound activities which require the repression and ridiculing of
empathy and the systematic, cold-blooded deploying of murderous violence on innocent weaker
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beings. Therefore the general and idealized definition of “humanity” is starkly and inescapably
contradicted by the particular concrete actions (the category-bound activities) through which our
species has chosen to define itself in its actual relationships with the rest of the world, and with
animals in particular, and through which humanity is performed, affirmed and reiterated.
We cannot have it both ways. The sooner we realize this, the better. For all concerned.
Notes
1
“If there is a sense of reality, and nobody will doubt that its existence has its justification, then
there must also exist something that one can call a sense of possibility.
Whoever possesses it does not say, for instance, "Here this or that happened, will happen,
must happen," but invents ‘Here something could or should happen’; and when someone tells
him about something, that it is so as it is, then he thinks, "Well, it could probably also be
otherwise." So that the sense of possibility could be defined as the ability to think about whatever
could also be the case, and not to take whatever is more seriously than what is not. It is plain to
see that the consequences of such a creative attitude can be remarkable, and unfortunately it is
not infrequent that they make what people admire appear false and what they prohibit as
permitted or even both as indifferent.” (Musil 1930/32 Vol. I, p. 16, my translation).
2
"Einen Bauwillen und bewußten Utopismus, der die Wirklichkeit nicht scheut, wohl aber als
Aufgabe und Erfindung behandelt." (Musil 1930/32 Vol. I, p. 16).
3
The paper I am referring to here was put together after Sacks’s death by Gail Jefferson, Sack’s
first and best student, from material in two of Sacks’s lectures, which Jefferson then went on to
edit in their entirety: see Sacks 1992.
4
The critique of performances, of their enactment, of the violence underlying their social
compulsoriness and of their identitarian consequences is a major theme in Butler’s work, from
Butler 1990 onwards:
acts, gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense that the
essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are fabrications manufactured
and sustained through corporeal signs and other discursive means. That the gendered
body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts
that constitute its reality. (Butler 1990 p.185)
Performativity cannot be understood outside of a process of iterability, a regularized and
constrained repetition of norms. And this repetition is not performed by a subject; this
repetition is what enables a subject and constitutes the temporal condition for the subject.
This iterability implies that ‘performance’ is not a singular ‘act’ or event, but a ritualized
production, a ritual reiterated under and through constraint, under and through the force
of prohibition and taboo, with the threat of ostracism and even death controlling and
compelling the shape of the production [...]. (Butler 1993 p. 95)
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There is no gender identity behind the expressions of gender; [...] identity is
performatively constituted by the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
(Butler 1990 p.25)
5
Sacks (who died in a car crash at forty having only published a dozen articles) never had a
chance to develop his ideas on categories in an orderly and systematic fashion. His most
important extant (or, at least, published) work, Lectures on Conversation, is a transcription of
oral texts addressed to an audience of absolute beginners and spanning a period of nine years,
during which Sacks’s interests and ideas altered their course under the influence of a range of
factors which are now impossible to reconstruct; as a consequence they are marked by
discontinuities, inconsistencies and repetitions. Therefore, his theory of categories must be
reconstructed by means of a slow and painstaking work, comparing and linking a considerable
number of different ideas and intuitions, whose connections are often far from apparent,
scattered throughout the Lectures.
6
See, for instance, Sacks 1992 vol. I p.241.
7
I am well aware that, in a considerable number of non-Western societies and cultures, animals
are at the center of a rich web of shared meanings and social exchanges and are sometimes
idealized and even worshipped. However, in all these cultures animals are also invariably
oppressed, exploited and murdered. Maintaining that the centrality of animals as symbols in a
culture makes this culture less likely to oppress, exploit and murder actual, concrete animals is
like claiming that in traditional Catholic cultures women are not oppressed because everybody
worships the virgin Mary. The mere fact that the first position can be stated in academic debate
with a straight face and with no adverse consequences while the second would get anyone
laughed out of any seminar or conference room is not only disturbing evidence of the survival of
the myth of the noble savage, but also shows how structurally invisible the cultural universal of
human mastery is even to people whose professional credibility hinges on their supposed ability
to acknowledge and to question their own assumptions.
References
Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York: Routledge,
1990. Print.
---. Bodies that Matter. New York: Routledge, 1993. Print.
Canetti, Elias. Masse und Macht. Hamburg: Claassen, 1960. Print.
Dell’Aversano, Carmen. “The Love Whose Name Cannot be Spoken: Queering the HumanAnimal Bond.” Journal for Critical Animal Studies 8.1-2 (2010): 73-125. Print.
Maturana, Humberto. "Everything is Said by an Observer." Gaia, a Way of Knowing. Ed.
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William Irwin Thompson. Great Barrington, MA: Lindisfarne Press, 1987. 65-82. Print.
Musil, Robert. Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften. 1930/32. Reinbek: Rowohlt Verlag, 1987. Print.
Plumwood, Val. Feminism and the Mastery of Nature. New York: Routledge, 1993. Print.
Sacks, Harvey. “On Doing ‘Being Ordinary’.” Structures of Social Action. Studies in
Conversation Analysis. Eds. J. Maxwell Atkinson and John Heritage. Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 1984. 413-29. Print.
---. Lectures on Conversation. Ed. Gail Jefferson. Oxford: Blackwell, 1992. Print.
Wiesel, Elie. “Elie Wiesel – Acceptance Speech.” Nobelprize.org. Nobel Media AB 2014.
<http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1986/wieselacceptance_en.html>.
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Behaving Like Animals: Shame and the Human-Animal Border in The Unbearable
Lightness of Being and Disgrace.
Daniella Cádiz Bedini*
Abstract: Among the many qualities denied to the animal, including pain, self-awareness,
mourning and language, shame is the one that has received the least academic scrutiny. The
author draws on the biblical tale of Genesis to reach an understanding of shame and the
construction of the human, while at the same time examining the repercussions that this thinking
has on literary depictions of animals. Looking at a range of critical voices including Velleman,
Derrida and Agamben, and more specifically at two contemporary novels, The Unbearable
Lightness of Being (1984) by Milan Kundera and Disgrace (1999) by J.M. Coetzee, this paper
seeks to challenge the dominant view that shame is the exclusive property of the human.
Keywords: animals, dogs, Kundera, Coetzee, The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Disgrace
Perhaps the woman stood frequently in front of the mirror observing her body, trying to
peer through it into her soul, as Tereza had done since childhood. Surely she, too, had
harbored the blissful hope of using her body as a poster for her soul. But what a
monstrous soul it would have to be if it reflected that body, that rack of four pouches.
-Milan Kundera (The Unbearable Lightness of Being 137-8)
“The Church Fathers had a long debate about them, and decided they don’t have proper
souls,” he observes. “Their souls are tied to their bodies and die with them.” Lucy shrugs.
“I’m not sure that I have a soul. I wouldn’t know a soul if I saw one.”
- J.M. Coetzee (Disgrace 78-9)
On close inspection, all literature is probably a version of the apocalypse that seems to
me rooted, no matter what its sociohistorical conditions might be, on the fragile border
(borderline cases) where identities (subject/object, etc.) do not exist or only barely so—
double, fuzzy, heterogeneous, animal, metamorphosed, altered, abject.
- Julia Kristeva (Powers of Horror 207)
One of the earliest and most influential stories in western culture to deal with the body, or
with shame, is Genesis; but to speak of shame, it seems, is to speak of something designated only
to what we call “the human.” The topic has vexed critics for centuries and these debates have not
swerved past the field of animal studies. The ecofeminist Carol Adams, for instance, interprets the
Daniella Cádiz Bedini holds a Master’s degree in Language, Literature and Modernity from the University of Cape
Town. Her literary interests include ecocriticism and critical animal studies, diaspora studies, translation,
postcolonial and 20th Century Latin American fiction. Contact details: cadiz.d@gmail.com
*
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Garden of Eden as a vegetarian paradise1 and Jacques Derrida in other ways challenges an
interpretation of Genesis as a tale of human consequence made up only of human protagonists. In
this paper I want to argue that the biblical tale of Genesis forms a crucial backdrop for
understanding how we read the two novels that I place in conversation here, Milan Kundera’s The
Unbearable Lightness of Being (1984) and J.M. Coetzee’s Disgrace (1999). Coetzee’s novel
makes various subtle references to Genesis (167-169), even in its title, and Kundera’s novel
contains longer, more detailed references to the Fall— specifically to the consequences on the
treatment of animals (286-290). One of the elements that links the two novels is a preoccupation
with the “human” and a persistent testing of the limits between human and animal. The title of this
paper takes into account the many sexual acts and encounters that take place in these novels and
thinks through some of the ways in which they complicate— rather than safeguard— a sense of
what it means to be human, or to act humanely. These two texts interpret the nebulous border
between human and animal precisely via a preoccupation with shame and the body, and both offer
us an interpretation of shame and awareness that expands the narrow confines of the human and
instead exposes shame as a form of public vulnerability— one that is not limited to the human, yet
is predetermined by it. In so doing, these novels not only challenge the human-animal divide but
also offer us a different practical model with which to engage with non-human animals, and with
lives not considered normatively “human.”
The central protagonists of the Unbearable Lightness of Being are the promiscuous doctor,
Tomas, his insecure wife, Tereza, and their sexually ambiguous dog, Karenin. Other important
characters in the novel are Tomas’ long-time lover, Sabina, and her other lover, Franz. There is
also Mephisto, the pig that Karenin befriends on the farm towards the end of the novel. Like other
of Kundera’s works, this one comprises a series of interlocking narratives that in some ways
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mirror each other and echo Nietzsche’s philosophical idea of eternal return— introduced in the
opening pages of the novel— that the ever-present narrator defines as either one in which
“everything recurs as we once experienced it, and that the recurrence itself recurs ad infinitum” or
one in which a life “which disappears once and for all, which does not return, is like a shadow,
without weight, dead in advance, and whether it was horrible, beautiful, or sublime, its horror,
sublimity and beauty mean nothing” (3). Against this background of repetition or erasure, the
narrator weaves a series of opposites, “light/darkness, finesse/coarseness, warmth/cold, being/
non-being” (5). Another fundamental pair of opposites that the novel explores is between the
human and the animal: the distance between these two and the events that threaten to reduce the
distinction to nothing.
One of the most discordant tales among this array is the one that tells the story of Stalin’s
son who “habitually left a foul mess” in the latrine of the German camp he was imprisoned in
during World War II (243). He is unable to stand the humiliation that he, “the Son of God
(because his father was revered like God),” defecates and after he is accused “of being dirty”
(244) he commits suicide by running onto the electrified fence that surrounds the camp. “Stalin’s
son,” the narrator tells us, “laid down his life for shit” (245). What his death highlights, we are
further told, is the “vertiginously close” relation between the “sublime” and the “paltry” (244), the
desire for a link to the divine, and the reality of the physical body. The narrator goes on to trace
this relation from different Gnostic and theological viewpoints (245-8). The death of Stalin’s son
is no trivial matter—it sheds light on a metaphysical question that casts its shadow over other
characters in the novel. As Guy Scarpetta notes, Stalin’s son’s conundrum explores the duality of
“the body and the soul, of the upper and lower, that of a humanity created ‘in the image of God’
but needing to shit every day” (114). In this way, Scarpetta sees defecation “in metonymic relation
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to original sin, to the indelible stain of the species” (114). The word “stain” can here be figured as
the one left from physical processes (which we share with other animals), and can be further
thought of as the burden of shame. One of the founding texts of western modernity, which both
Kundera’s The Unbearable Lightness of Being and Coetzee’s Disgrace in different ways engage,
is the Bible. It is here, in Genesis, that shame is related to the body, though ascribed only to the
human.
Genesis tells us that in the Garden of Eden Adam and Eve “were both naked” and “were
not ashamed” (Gn. 2:25). However, after eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, both
their eyes “were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together
and made themselves aprons” (Gn. 3:7). The question of what exactly Adam and Eve were made
aware of has vexed readers for centuries. In an article titled “The Genesis of Shame,” David
Velleman takes an original stance in his reading of this biblical tale. He suggests that the
knowledge gained from eating the forbidden fruit had little to do with a discovery of the
possibility of sexual encounter between Adam and Eve— which surely they knew from before
given that they had already been commanded by God to “be fruitful and multiply”— and had
cleaved to each other “and become one flesh” (Gn. 2:24). “The knowledge gained from the tree,”
claims the writer,
was not physically extracted from the fruit itself...it was knowledge gained in the act of
eating the fruit...[and ] was gained in practice only after having been suggested in theory,
by the serpent. What the serpent put into Eve's ear as a theory, which she and Adam went
on to prove in practice, was the idea of disobedience: "You don't have to obey." (30)
Interestingly, Velleman views the challenge to obedience as lying in a negation of the
godly command to “be fruitful and multiply.” He notes that Adam and Eve became ashamed only
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when they realised that they had some control over the actions of their bodies, but that this could
be overturned (and visibly so) by physical desire (31). This newfound knowledge brings forth “if
not the idea of saying ‘no’ to sex, then at least the idea of saying ‘not here’ and ‘not now’” (30). In
this way the writer traces the idea of shame into the domains of the public and the private. This
requires a specific place and time in which to perform certain bodily acts, including sexual ones,
and entails not only recognition of privacy and transgression but also an awareness of the role of
the body (now refigured as culpability) in this transgression. In a way, observes Velleman, “the
serpent’s message of disobedience did convey a piece of sexual knowledge, after all” (30).
For Velleman, then, the biblical quote about Adam and Eve’s eyes being opened hinges on
the difference between looking and seeing. It is not that Adam and Eve were blind before eating
the fruit, or that they were not naked, but that they became conscious of their nudity and the
possibilities inherent in that. The denial to “be fruitful and multiply” is one of these. The
difference between looking and seeing marks the conventional split between the animal and the
human, the body and the mind, being and knowing. In line with this, Velleman states that privacy
“is made possible by the ability to choose in opposition to inclination” (35). In other words, it is
made possible only through a conscious negation of instincts. At this point, we can quibble with
Velleman as he falls in line with “the old Churchfathers” (Coetzee 78) spoken of by Lurie in
Disgrace when he states:
To a creature who does whatever its instincts demand, there is no space between
impulse and action, and there is accordingly less space between inner and outer selves.
Because a dog has relatively little control over its [sic] impulses, its impulses are legible
in its behaviour. Whatever itches, it scratches (or licks or nips or drags along the ground),
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and so its itches are always overt, always public. By contrast, our capacity to resist desires
enables us to choose which desires our behaviour will express. (Velleman 35)
For the philosopher, the process of knowing what to do in public and what to leave for the
private domain requires making “your noises and movements...interpretable, not merely as
coherent speech and action, but also as intended to be interpretable as such” (Velleman 36). It
means being able to wear a social mask that limits what is done in public and separates it from the
private. But Velleman is careful to note that “self-presentation is not a dishonest activity” because
there is nothing dishonest about choosing not to scratch wherever and whenever it itches.
Although you don't make all of your itches overt, in the manner of a dog, you aren't
falsely pretending to be less itchy than a dog. (37)
It comes down to knowing which itch to scratch, and where to scratch it. The failure to
conform to this— either through inability, ignorance or defiance— signals a transgression that
aligns the transgressor with animals. The “present-day moral” (50) of Velleman’s observations,
which he expounds via an explanation of the social articulations of homosexual desire and what
he refers to as the “moralist’s” (50-2) censure of this, is troubling:
To say that the homosexual should not, in the end, be flaunting his sexuality is not
at all to suggest a return to the closet, since privacy is not the same as secrecy or denial.
Everyone knows that most adults have sex with their dates or domestic partners (among
others), and no reasonable norm of privacy would rule out discussion or display of who is
dating or living with whom. But allowing people to know something should not be
confused with presenting it to their view. There’s a difference between “out of the closet”
and “in your face,” and what makes the divergence is privacy. In short, Adam and Eve
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were right to avail themselves of fig leaves. Although the term “fig leaf” is now a term of
derision, I think that fig leaves are nothing to be ashamed of. (52)
In the end, for Velleman “our sense of privacy” becomes intricately woven with “an
expression of our personhood” (52), which here animals are denied, and by implication so are ‘inyour-face’ homosexuals. To be fair, his is not an isolated idea. It echoes even the early work of
Freud, who affirmed that “for all purposes in everyday life” a display of sexuality was “something
that is improper and must be kept secret” (Freud 304). The meaning of Velleman’s assertions are
clear— he is not saying that homosexuality is immoral or that it should be kept out of society’s
attention because it is bad— but his call for it to remain private (and here, the notion of privacy
seems to marry that of decency) silences the historically-determined potency and dimensions of
queer politics. To be openly gay is as much a personal choice as a political move, and to silence
the call and disruptions caused by a politics of gay pride— which in the face of political
discrimination and social bias have been met often with cruelty and violence— is to muffle also
the webs of connectivity that such politics can inspire. Against this background of shame, we see
that Velleman’s assertions lead to a normative and anthropocentric vision of shame and of
personhood.2
I do not mean to conflate the varying discourses of animal ethics, sexism, racism, and
sexuality (as is often the case in animal rights activism) and to treat them as though they are all
part of the same grand scheme.3 To do so erases the important individual characteristics of each,
as well as the historical circumstances that shape them.4 This is akin to what Judith Butler
discusses in Bodies that Matter:
It seems crucial to resist the model of power that would set up racism and
homophobia and misogyny as parallel or analogical relations. The assertion of their
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abstract or structural equivalence not only misses the specific histories of their
construction and elaboration, but also delays the important work of thinking through the
ways in which these vectors of power require and deploy each other for the purpose of
their own articulation. (xxvi)
Velleman’s analysis of shame, although riddled with an overt sense of what Richard
Ryder in 1970 coined “speciesism” (1), sheds light on the role of the body in relation to shame.
That is, shame entails an acute awareness of the body and its actions. Therefore, at least since
Genesis, shame has been thought of as a human attribute. A denial of the body or its desires
(whether it be scratching an itch, passing gas or fornicating) signals an ability to control the body
and its urges— which supposedly safeguards against shame, and against comparison to animals.
To control these urges is seen as an element of separation from the “animal kingdom” (which
becomes characterised as lacking in shame, so having no need to cover up the body and its
processes). In other words, shame can be said to belong to the descendants of the fallen, and
accordingly as a factor that distinguishes them from animals. What is interesting is that the notion
of privacy finds its origin in humanity’s first consciousness and marks the split between an
invisible interior realm (the mind, the soul) and our visible presence (the body). In the tale of
Genesis, animals did not eat from the forbidden tree, so remained innocent of that transgression,
and of the subsequent punishments related to that fall (including expulsion from Eden and the
burden of shame). That they are relieved of blame, however, has initiated them into another type
of fall: they are seen as different and separate from humans. This has been a form of punishment,
and has led to subsequent punishments. In our colloquial use of the term, even calling someone
“shameless” or “animal” has negative connotations.
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Kundera’s novel was published almost 20 years before Derrida’s The Animal that
therefore I am, and both texts take to heart the notion that animals, unlike Adam and Eve, were
never expelled from Eden. The narrator of The Unbearable Lightness of Being makes the incisive
(and comic) observation that “of course, Genesis was written by a man, not a horse” (286). This
gesture alone signals a change from reading Genesis as only a tale consisting of human
protagonists and human consequence, and instead shifts the attention to the role of animals. The
taken-for-granted supremacy of humans (and male humans at that) above other animals is
explained as being so entrenched in human outlook, that to recognise it would be possible only
from the point of view of “a third party […] a Martian [… a] non-man” (286-7). The novel
presents us with other avenues for empathy with animals— either a separation from society, as
Tereza contemplates toward the end of the novel (281-303), or a removal “from the world of
people” via insanity:
…Seeing a horse and a coachman beating it with a whip, Nietzsche went up to the
horse and, before the coachman’s very eyes, put his arms around the horse’s neck and
burst into tears. […] I feel this gesture has broad implications: Nietzsche was trying to
apologise to the horse for Descartes. His lunacy (that is, his final break with mankind)
began at the very moment he burst into tears over the horse. And that is the Nietzsche I
love, just as I love Tereza with the mortally ill dog resting his head on her lap. I see them
one next to the other: both stepping down from the road along which mankind, “the
master and proprietor of nature,” marches onward. (290)
Velleman’s astute description of the human as a “self-presenting creature” (37) is relevant
to us as it discloses the human as one who makes absent, or hides, aspects of one’s life. One way
to do this is through language. As the word “hides” connotes, this can be a conscious decision,
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and can have baleful or otherwise treacherous implications. The human fall from grace, after all,
rests upon the deceit (or “subtle” words) spoken by the serpent (Gn. 2:25). There are constant
references to the body, the invasion of privacy and the dislodgement of language in The
Unbearable Lightness of Being.5 Kundera’s novel depicts various scenarios where language, or
even simple conversations between friends, are used to create suspicion and are the origin of
trickery, hypocrisy or deceit. The weekly radio show that broadcasts the “montage of private
conversations recorded with the latest bugging devices by a Czech spy who had infiltrated the
émigré community” (132) is an example of this. The horror that these shows inspire in the
listening audience is not so much concerned with what is said (which is acknowledged as being
the same things everyone else is saying) as with the fact that the private is made known publically.
The dismantling of the boundaries between the private and the public is made more menacing by
the inclusion of words and expressions that call forth an unseen animal cluster. Michael Henry
Heim’s English translation of Kundera’s novel is especially adept at capturing these subtleties. In
the passage from where this quote is taken, the description of the unaware speakers as having
“their every step dogged,” and words and phrases such as “bugging devices,” the “strength and
vitality of an ox” and “bugged” depict this (132-3). There is something decidedly un-human,
inhumane, in making public news of private matters. What is threatened here is not only one’s
privacy, but one’s sense of what it means to be human when living within a social body that
routinely ignores the borders one has set up.
The issue of borders is, of course, an important aspect of The Unbearable Lightness of
Being. Borders are instrumental in guiding the events of the novel, which although published in
1984, is set during the Prague Spring of 1968—a time when Czechoslovakia’s own physical
borders were invaded by the Soviet army. This invasion forms the basis for the transgression of a
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number of other borders— some unseen, like the dismantling of the private domain that we saw in
the discussion on the recorded conversations. Moreover, the novel was originally published in
installments while Kundera was in exile, and at a time in which other notorious borders still
divided the European continent. The Berlin Wall, for instance, would come down only in 1989,
five years after the initial publication of Kundera’s novel. This division, made literal by walls,
casts its shadow in the novel:
Since the days of the French Revolution, one half of Europe has been referred to
as the left, the other half as the right. Yet to define one or the other by means of the
theoretical principles it professes is all but impossible. And no wonder: political
movements rest not so much on rational attitudes as on the fantasies, images, words, and
archetypes that come together to make up this or that political kitsch. (257)
Despite the dismissive claims against “political kitsch,” geographical borders mark the life
of various characters in the novel. Franz, for instance, in his search for “the fantasy of the Grand
March” (257), initiates the fateful trip to the border between Cambodia and Thailand, only to not
be allowed to cross, and is later killed (256-278). The crossing of borders has similarly negative
consequences for Tomas and Tereza when they emigrate from Czechoslovakia to Switzerland.
When Tereza unexpectedly returns to Prague, Tomas has the startling realisation that:
the borders between his country and the rest of the world were no longer open. No
telegrams or telephone calls could bring her back. The authorities would never let her
travel abroad. Her departure was staggeringly definitive. (29)
On his return to Czechoslovakia, Tomas is “welcomed by columns of Russian tanks” (33).
The ironic reference to his homecoming signals a border (marked by a row of tanks that take half
an hour to pass) that he will not be able to cross again. His return is also “staggeringly definitive”
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and Tomas and Tereza live out the rest of their days in the countryside. Curiously, various critics
writing about Kundera’s novel have focused on (or formulated) other imaginary, or imagined
borders in the novel. These borders have been used to separate characters into groups, which in
fact mimics a move taken by the ever-present narrator of Kundera’s novel, when for instance, he
states that “we all need someone to look at us. We can be divided into four categories according to
the kind of look we wish to live under…” (261-71). In her analysis of Kundera’s oeuvre, Gurstein
follows this pattern and signals “three kinds of characters or ideal types” (1262) in his work.
These are “the vulgarian, the liberationist, and the modest person” (1262). She states that
“whether from hubris or ignorance, characters like Tereza's mother, Tomas, Edwige, and Jan [in
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting] are unable to recognize, as Tereza does, that there are
definite limits to experience, lest one finds oneself trapped on the other side of ‘the border’”
(1275). But Gurstein never defines what she means by “the border.” Similarly, the French writer
and critic Guy Scarpetta, in his essay about sexuality in The Unbearable Lightness of Being, states
that the novel “places in opposition romantic obsession, which seeks THE woman in every
woman, and can only lead to disappointment, and the libertine obsession, whose donjuanism aims
at the uniqueness of each woman, her ‘formula’” (110). The initial distinction Scarpetta draws
between romantic and sexual obsessions leads him to further divide the characters into groups.
That Scarpetta first divides them on the basis of sexual difference: “On the masculine side…as for
the women…” (110) seems inadequate given that the novel is particularly concerned with a
careful dismantling of static notions of gender, stereotypical sexual roles (the passive woman and
the dominant male) or even species lines. Karenin is, after all, a “female” dog named after a
“male” literary figure and possesses a degree of sexuality normally denied to animals, including
possible homosexuality (Kundera 23-4). We can usefully rework Scarpetta’s analysis into a
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division of those that are “inept at libertinage” (122), like Franz and Tereza, and those that thrive
in the physicality of the body, like Tomas, Sabina and Tereza’s mother. There is some truth in
Scarpetta’s naming of this latter group as those that “rehabilitate shit and wallow in it” (114).
These divisions also form the backbone to the structure of the novel, specifically in the two
separate chapters titled “Soul and Body.”
One way to articulate what is meant by “the border” that Gurstein and other critics hint at
but do not explain, is to say that it relates to the complex (and somewhat equally imagined)
boundaries between the human and the animal. That these boundaries cause unease in some
characters, and that even critics of the novels struggle to define it, is telling. It hints, if not exactly
at the non-existence of a border, then at least at what Giorgio Agamben has deemed “first of all
[…] a mobile border” (15), one that is permeable to change and in that way is dependent on the
social situation in which it exists. I want to maintain the links that critics have drawn between the
transgression of purity and sin, shame and shamelessness, or have simply called the “border,” but
I want to add that these divisions also hinge on the duality between the public and the private and
the body and the soul, which the novel attempts to trace. These dualities also introduce an
important division in the novel between animal and human, which the reader experiences through
Tereza.
“The point where difference and identity undecidedly converge for Kundera,” writes Terry
Eagleton, “is above all sexuality, linking as it does the unrepeatable quality of a particular loverelationship with the ceaselessly repetitive, tediously predictable character of the bodily drives”
(29). Here, then, Eagleton presents us with a simple, but sophisticated, description of the
“undecided convergence” of two fundamental aspects of the novel: the physical and the spiritual.
The complex, and seemingly incongruous, relation between these two poles falls most heavily on
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Tereza in the novel, whom we are told repeatedly by the narrator has since childhood “stood
frequently in front of the mirror observing her body, trying to peer through it into her soul” (137).
It is from her perspective, after all, that the idea of the body as the “seat of the soul” begins to be
dismantled. Through her eyes, for instance, we see breasts that are not idealised but instead
described as “quivering pouches” that do nothing more than spray “tiny drops of cold water right
and left” when leaving the sauna (138). Similarly, her thoughts make us imagine the buttocks as
“two enormous sacks” (137). There is something decidedly honest in the description of these two
body parts, for in their shape and dimension, they may certainly resemble the roundness of a bag
(“pouch” or “sack”). Here, Tereza does not know the woman whose body she is describing, so is
able to look on her (her physical qualities) in a detached manner, without seeking out her “soul”
(as she attempts to do with herself in front of the mirror). The language she uses is devoid of
emotional touches that would “dress up” her descriptions. In a way then, her language is as naked
as the woman is.6 This shows that if language has the capacity to adorn and beautify, it is equally
able to dress down or expose. This same level of objectivity is used by the narrator to describe the
human face, depicting it as “nothing but an instrument panel registering all the body mechanisms:
digestion, sight, hearing, respiration, thought” (40). That thought would here be classified as a
mechanism of the body is interesting because it diminishes a sense of it being attached to the
mind, to rationality or other “higher functions.” Instead, it is brought down to the level of reflex.
Gurstein observes that this way of seeing the body is an attempt “to do away with those artifices
that embellish or disguise the potentially leveling aspects of bodily functions” (1266). What
Gurstein does not explain, however, is what level these depictions supposedly come to. I want to
argue that what these descriptions do is remind us of the physical urges and processes we share
with other animals, and in so doing humble a view of the human as superior or as somehow more
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enlightened than animals. “By concentrating on the body,” Gurstein notes, every experience is
pulled “down to earth, turning spirit into flesh” (1266).
The description of bodies as “flesh” can be linked to Tomas’s own clinical language used
elsewhere in the novel. His profession means he has consented, like other doctors, “to spend his
life involved with human bodies and all that they entail” (Kundera 193). The emphasis on the
body, however, does not diminish the sense that there may be more to the human than pure
physicality:
Surgery takes the basic imperative of the medical profession to its outermost border,
where the human makes contact with the divine. [. . .] God, it may be assumed, took
murder into account; He did not take surgery into account. He never suspected that
someone would dare to stick his hand into the mechanism He had invented, wrapped
carefully in skin, and sealed away from human eyes. When Tomas first positioned his
scalpel on the skin of a man asleep under anaesthetic, then breached the skin with a
decisive incision, and finally cut it open with a precise and even stroke (as if it were a
piece of fabric— a coat, a skirt, a curtain), he experienced a brief but intense feeling of
blasphemy. (193-194)
Here, the body and soul hang together in an uneasy compromise, as they do throughout
the novel. As Gurstein notes, the description of the “brief but intense feeling of blasphemy” that
Tomas feels the first time he cuts the skin of the patient “compels us to notice how closely the
realm of the body is connected to things sacred” (1261). Moreover, that the skin of the patient
should be described parenthetically, “(as if it were a piece of fabric- a coat, a skirt, a curtain),” is
telling, for all these objects are themselves meant to be a cover to the body or, like a curtain, to
one’s privacy. We can see a link between Tomas (the “defiler of privacy”) and Tereza’s mother,
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whom we are told liked to parade naked before strangers, only to have a sixteen year old Tereza
try “to protect her mother’s modesty” by quickly closing “the curtains so that no one could see
from across the street” (45). The underbelly of the “brief but intense feeling of blasphemy” (194)
that Tomas experiences is here illustrated in the raucous laughter of Tereza’s mother and her
friends:
“Tereza can't reconcile herself to the idea that the human body pisses and farts,” she said.
“What's so terrible about that?” and in answer to her own question she broke wind loudly.
All the women laughed again. (45)
Not surprisingly, we are told that Tereza grew up in a home where “there was no such
thing as shame” (45). In the novel Tereza is frequently described as trying to escape, physically
and mentally, from the “world of immodesty” (47) in which her mother lives and to which she has
forced her to belong. Her mother’s behaviour includes farting in public, blowing her nose loudly,
speaking about her sex life, loosening her teeth, walking around naked and not closing doors in
the house (45-7). What horrifies Tereza about her mother is not only that she herself “can't
reconcile […] the idea that the human body pisses and farts” (45), but that her mother lets what
Tereza regards as private into the domain of the public. In her desire to escape from this “world of
crudity” (47) Tereza is in some ways not very different from Stalin’s son, who similarly cannot
stand the incompatibility of the “sublime” and the “paltry” (244). Both are encumbered by a
vision of the human that excludes, but cannot exist without, the body.
The tension between the holy and the quotidian casts its shadow over other parts of the
novel. Notably, the duality between the purely physical and the ether-like spiritual substance that
the soul represents is described as “that fundamental human experience” (40). This would suggest
that animals, including Karenin in the novel, are exempt from this duality and so retain only their
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physicality. I want to argue, however, that it is through Tereza that we gain an additional
perspective on the animal in the novel. This is depicted through her close relation with Karenin,
the various dream sequences of bodily vulnerability and the numerous comparisons of her to Saint
Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals and the environment (49, 50, 53, 78, etc.). In the
novel, Tereza has recurring nightmares about being cast only as a body without a soul. We can
think back to the Cartesian divide which denies animals a soul, and read Tereza’s horror as
depicting explicitly the violence of this denial: to be forced to live as only animal is, among other
things, to be vulnerable to harm. I want to argue that Tereza’s suffering at the cost of being
considered only a body renders the experience of being only “animal” explicit and legible. So
while the narrative voice, especially the omniscient narrator, allows Karenin’s thoughts to be
perceptible (e.g. 74, 283-4) a further dimension of comprehensibility is made possible through
Tereza— who clearly articulates the horror of being considered soulless. Tereza likens this to
existing in a world which is “nothing but a vast concentration camp of bodies, one like the next,
with souls invisible” (47). For her, this again harks back to her mother’s world, where “all bodies
were the same and marched behind one another in formation” (57). Tereza experiences a similar
horror when she recognises that Tomas’s affairs will not stop:
She had come to him to escape her mother’s world, a world where all bodies were equal.
She had come to him to make her body unique, irreplaceable. But he, too, had drawn an
equal sign between her and the rest of them: he kissed them all alike, stroked them alike,
made no, absolutely no distinction between Tereza’s body and the other bodies. He had
sent her back into the world she tried to escape, sent to march naked with the other naked
women. (58)
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In Kundera’s novel, the emergence of the soul (which is never defined but is articulated as
a non-physical substance) “rescues” the individual from a purely physical state. That Tereza
yearns to form part of a spiritual, rather than physical, domain is made palpable in her desire for
books and music, elements that she regards as “the emblems of a secret brotherhood […] a single
weapon against the world of crudity surrounding her” (47). Here, Tereza draws a bold line
separating the world of “culture” from that of the body, which can in other words be described as
the duality of the mind and the body, or forming part of the nature-culture divide. That a dog such
as Karenin— who according to this logic is presumably steeped in the natural world— should be
named after a highly regarded cultural product is of interest to us. It again draws attention to the
complexity of his character and to the wider domain of meaning encompassed by his persona in
the novel. His own death spans the final chapters (as opposed to Tomas’ and Tereza’s deaths,
which we are told about in a single sentence early on in the novel) and the way he is treated before
that becomes the ultimate definer of “true human goodness, in all its purity and freedom” because
it comes “to the fore only when its recipient has no power” (289).
As I have mentioned, the duality of the body and soul remains an enduring (and
unresolved) concern and emerges especially in scenes of physical encounter. The sexual
encounters that take place in the novel are some of these. It is here that words lose “their magic
power” (154) and more attention is lent to the body. Tereza’s affair with the engineer (who may
be a spy) is an example of this and presents us with a way in which the discourse surrounding the
possession of a soul may be used to condone behaviour or evade a sense of wrongdoing (155).
The image of Tereza’s soul hovering above the bed while she is in the throes of passion with the
engineer demonstrates this:
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...the engineer’s hand referred to her body, and she realised that she (her soul) was
not at all involved, only her body, her body alone...she also knew that if the feeling of
excitement was to continue, her soul’s approval would have to keep mute...what made the
soul so excited was that the body was acting against its will; the body was betraying it,
and the soul was looking on. (154-5)
After Tereza has sex with the engineer, she enters his toilet and defecates. She regards this
as:
in fact a desire to go to the extreme of humiliation, to become only and utterly a body, the
body her mother used to say was good for nothing but digesting and excreting [... ]
Nothing could be more miserable than her naked body perched on the enlarged end of a
sewer pipe. (156-7)
Here, the description of the toilet as “the enlarged end of a sewer pipe” is another example
of the ability to employ language as tool of embellishment or exposure, which is a recurring
preoccupation in Kundera’s novel. The narrator explains that toilets
in modern water closets rise up from the floor like white water lilies. The architect does
all he can to make man ignore what happens to his intestinal wastes after the water from
the tank flushes them down the drain...the sewer pipelines reach far into our houses with
their tentacles, they are carefully hidden from view, and we are happily ignorant of the
Venice of shit underlying our bathrooms, dance halls, and parliaments. (156)
This description reveals the “hypocritical” (156) construction of toilets that aim to disguise
their function. Working class toilets, the narrator says, are less inclined to be as hypocritical and
this is reflected in their modest (purely functional) design. Tereza’s mother and her husband
belong to this group, which may explain the lengths the narrator goes to in order to express the
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general ease, if not exaltation, toward their coarseness and their “animal” side, and also the
unveiled honesty with which they approach the body and physical processes. That the pipelines in
the above quote are described as tentacles that stretch across a number of social settings is
interesting because, once again, it depicts a shared aspect of physicality—despite hypocrisy, class
or social situation— that “pulls every experience down to earth” (Gurstein 1266). Here, the
aesthetic appeal of a toilet that resembles a water lily parallels the covering up we do with words.
The hypocrisy I have just discussed in terms of Tereza’s absent soul or the construction of
toilets is visible also in the relationship between Franz and Sabina, for it is similarly burdened by
shame. Tereza’s desire to separate the sublime from the physical is comparable to Franz’s desire,
when having sex, to seek a darkness that calls for an erasure of the limits of the body: “the
darkness was pure, perfect, thoughtless, visionless, that darkness was without end, without
borders; that darkness was the infinite we carry within us” (95). Of course, this ideal state is
difficult to achieve in material ways. For this to function, Franz establishes a strict set of borders
that limits the time and place of his sexual rendezvous with Sabina. For him, love “was not an
extension of public life but its antithesis” (83). His creation of a “restricted zone of purity” (82)
that prohibits him from having sex with Sabina in certain places is emblematic of this and the
“independent space” (82) he creates allows him to have sex without feeling he has disregarded the
border of the zone of purity he has created. Comically, this limits “their lovemaking to foreign
cities” (83). Franz’s attempts to demarcate a singular space, one that is outside of his own
conjugal space, illustrates his need to separate his heart or head from what his body craves. The
joke here is that he is an academic and that in spite of these self-imposed restrictions he continues
his affair with Sabina. Moreover, Franz falls deeply in love with her and leaves his wife— only to
be abandoned by Sabina before he has a chance to return to her.
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The characters that remain furthest from a hypocritical account of their lives and actions
are Tomas and Sabina. At the same time, they are the characters most at ease with the physical
processes and urges of the body. Notably, Sabina has an orgasm at the thought of defecating in
front of Tomas (247), and so inverts Theresa’s previously discussed view of defecation as “the
extreme of humiliation” (167). In various ways, Tomas and Sabina are the most animalistic and
shameless of the characters. Another way to explore this is through the encounter between Tomas
and another of his lovers, the stork-woman, whom he meets after he loses his job and becomes a
window cleaner. This occupation allows to him to continue his inconspicuous sexual encounters
with all types of women. The stork-woman is described in terms that mingle the animal and the
human: “an odd combination of giraffe, stork, and sensitive young boy” (202). She initiates a “‘do
as I do’ kind of game” in which she mirrors every one of Tomas’s strokes and caress (203). This
both unsettles and fascinates him. On their second encounter she not only fails to comply with his
“strip!” command (which has been, until now, an unfailing ploy of his) but actually countercommands him to do the same thing (205). She follows his movements along his own body and
reaches his anus, “mimicking his moves with the precision of a mirror” (205). Her own anus is
described with words that suggest Tomas’s own medical language and vantage point: “unusually
prominent, evoking the long digestive tract that ended there with a slight protrusion” (205). Here,
neither Tomas nor the stork-woman is preoccupied with souls. Equally, no attention is paid to
beautiful bodies. What comes to the fore is an acceptance of the body’s oddness, or what might
otherwise be perceived as ugliness.
In line with this, the encounter with the stork-woman is replete with adjectives and nouns
of strangeness and difference. These include “bizarre,” “curiosities,” “unusual,” “odd,”
“asymmetry” and “originality” (202-4). The images of mirrors, glass and water (in many forms: in
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the toilet, in the bucket, in urine, in wine and in sinks) also pervade this scene of sexual encounter.
All these objects are able to reflect, which recalls the biblical myth founded on something that was
seen, and also Tereza’s constant looking in the mirror. Yet neither Tomas nor the stork-woman
feel strange or ever catch a glimpse of themselves in them. Perhaps what is unusual is that in this
scenario of intense sensual enjoyment and transgression (both are married to other people and he
has been sent by his boss to clean her windows), both characters remain— perhaps even against
the reader’s judgement— free of shame. Here, the image of Tomas and the stork-woman standing
above their garments naked and unashamed, coupled with the descriptions of water and wine, call
to mind a quasi-religious interaction that is at odds with its highly sexualised nature.
Scarpetta notes that for characters “who are as far from puritanism as they are from
pansexualism, from idealism as from naturalism, sexual pleasure presupposes the sense of sin”
(115). For him this means they can acknowledge “that the consciousness of a stain is necessary, if
only for the sake of transgressing that consciousness” (115). The prefix (‘pre’) in “presuppose”
could be read to mean that the characters are in a state prior to this acknowledgement. Like Adam
and Eve before the Fall, these characters are naked and not ashamed. We can read this scenario as
“a typological return” (Smith 237) to a time before the Fall in the Garden of Eden, before shame
was ever felt. There is in fact a fall of sorts in this one, too (Kundera 205-6). We can refigure
these characters’ lack of shame as linking them to Adam and Eve before sin, or to animals. What
Tomas, Sabina and the stork-woman share is a mutual fascination with the hidden aspects of the
body (internal organs, intercourse, cleansing or defecation). Unlike other characters in the novel,
these characters celebrate rather than bemoan the permeability of the “border.”
Crucially, the “right to shame” (57) that Tereza’s mother denies her becomes a potent
element in the safeguarding of human identity and guides the attitude and actions taken in
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Disgrace by David Lurie and his daughter, Lucy. An important distinction is that Coetzee’s novel
carefully derails the idea of shame as pertaining only to humans. The image of the dog Katy
“glancing around shiftily as if ashamed to be watched” while defecating demonstrates this (68).
Equally, we are told that before dying, the dogs at the clinic “flatten their ears, [...and] droop their
tails, as if they too feel the disgrace of dying” (143). The animals in Disgrace not only feel shame,
they can also identify it: “If, more often than not, the dog fails to be charmed, it is because of his
presence: he gives off the wrong smell (They can smell your thoughts), the smell of shame” (142).
By granting animals the right to shame, the novel sets up implicit links with the human characters,
and in doing so enlarges the scope of consideration regarding the capabilities and emotional lives
of animals. The recurrent use of the word “disgrace” creates an implicit link between the dogs and
Lurie, who has elsewhere described himself as being “in what I suppose one would call disgrace”
(85). Like Tomas in Kundera’s novel, David Lurie in this novel is sexually promiscuous, but his
“fall from grace” occurs after his affair with a much-younger student, Melanie, is made public.
Both novels are set in a secular time, and although Coetzee’s Disgrace also relies to some
degree on a theological vision of transgression and sin, it is not so much God’s word that
functions as a delineator of transgression, as the laws that demarcate one’s behaviour in society.
The acts that guide this process are imagined in detail by Lurie on the day he receives the
memorandum “notifying him that a complaint has been lodged against him under article 3.1 of the
university’s code of conduct” (38, 39-40). His transgression has been to mingle the private and the
public. That is, in his relations with Melanie, Lurie shifts a public relationship (the teacher-pupil
relation) to the domain of the private (sexual intercourse). As a transgressor of these limits he is
made to feel the implications of this transgression in his expulsion from the university. Lurie,
moreover, seems to have a knack for making the private public and for retaining his calm in these
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awkward moments.7 The conscious encroachment of Elaine Winter (“chair of his onetime
department”) at the supermarket is an example of this: she has “a trolleyful of purchases, he a
mere handbasket,” yet he obliges her to go before him (179-80). In the end, he relishes at her
acute awareness and embarrassment that her private life is being exposed by way of the objects
she is purchasing— which he “takes some pleasure” in watching her unload (179-80).
At the committee of enquiry set up to investigate Lurie’s behaviour with his student,
Lurie’s refusal to seek forgiveness using “words […] from his heart” (54) speaks back to his own
knowledge of words as being capable of deceit. Words, we have already been told, can be used
like whisky in one’s coffee “to lubricate” the listener (16, 168). This makes the decision not to
“speak from his heart” at the enquiry but later to attempt to do so in front of Melanie’s father,
Isaacs, interesting (165). The problem is that the language Lurie uses to explain his actions is
anything but “naked” in the Derridean sense (1); it is riddled with otherworldly allusions that take
the listener “in circles” (Coetzee 49, 53). This, I want to suggest, is done to distance him from the
event itself, and his complicity in it. Lurie expresses his own rising desire as emerging “from the
quiver of Aphrodite, goddess of the foaming waves” (25) and describes his violation of Melanie
first as “not rape, not quite that”(25), then vaguely as an inappropriate desire (43) and, finally, as
having been the work of Eros (52, 89). Although he does not make a recognisable connection
between his violation of Melanie and his daughter’s own gang rape, which occurs some time later
on her farm, this is something that other voices in the novel put pressure on. Lucy’s assertion that
“you are a man, you ought to know” highlights the proximity of these two separate events (158).
Like Cooper in her paper “Metamorphosis and Sexuality,” I am interested in “the
deployment of sexuality in the framework of allusion and under the aegis of myth” (23). For
Cooper, the “dense allusiveness and intricate play with mythic possibilities” this opens up implies
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that “Coetzee’s fascination with sexuality in Disgrace is deeply shaped by language and the
various symbolic forms it gives to instinct and desire” (23). In her analysis Cooper is concerned
with the manner in which these allusions create an “interplay of desire with scholarship and
knowledge” that (because they deal with “imported ideas”) frames the “unresolved destiny of
Anglo-European traditions, conventions, and epistemological structures in South Africa” (24). I
want to move from Cooper’s arguments to suggest that the allusions created by Lurie in his
descriptions are at once an attempt to denounce shame, and are conducive to a demarcation
between the human and the animal. But reference to Lurie’s own “urgencies of passion” (Coetzee
164) belie this boundary-making, as do the animalized descriptions of sex and rape that are used
in the novel.
We can think this along what Cooper has deemed a “narrative derailing” (36), that is, the
disjuncture between an event and its retelling. Here, the teller of the story is displaced when there
is a separation between the event and how the teller views himself within it. This is a concern in
Coetzee’s novel and can be seen in Lurie’s retelling of his involvement with Melanie, and in
Lucy’s silence concerning her own rape. That is, even as Lurie uses mythical allusions to describe
his violation of Melanie (a tactic that can be seen to distance him from his actions), the recurrent
image of Eros also alters “the terms of exchange between spirit and flesh, divine and human” (34).
This means that Lurie’s version of sexual intercourse displaces a purely “human” account of
events in that it mingles “both the divine and the bestial” and in its mythic conception “dislocates
the human” as the sole agent of the event (34). We can quibble with Cooper’s strict separation of
“the divine and the bestial” as it paints the two as existent and as polar opposites— not only
implying that the two have no shared aspects but that the latter is monstrous and base in
comparison. We can usefully employ the notion of this mingling of human and animal qualities
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(and maintain that they are both, like myths, more imagined than fact) to reveal the impulsive,
rather than rational, nature of Lurie’s affair. This harks back to our earlier discussion of Genesis,
specifically the insistence on a lack of control over the body (its functions and desires) as being
linked to shame. While we may read, then, Lurie’s words in the novel as attempting a degree of
separation from the event and from himself as animal, the narrative nonetheless derails this vision
by associating his image with the other-than-human aspects he describes. In this vein, a critic
recently made the astute observation:
The beginning and middle of the novel are characterized by a double standard
concerning Eros on Lurie’s behalf. He denigrates libido as animalistic but appeals to the
concept when it helps him justify his behaviour. When Lurie has sex with Melanie […],
he imagines the event to be motivated purely by instinct and thus to be removed from the
responsibility of the involved parties, just as animals are not responsible for their
behavior. (Wiegandt 123)
The writer then brings forth the crucial question: “Is it possible that the same god that
made him seduce Melanie acts through the rapists, the same god that dignifies even dogs by his
presence, as he explained to Lucy only minutes ago?” (126). The difficulty of answering this
question ties into Lurie’s and Lucy’s different approaches to these transformative events. Lucy
refers to her rape as “a purely private matter” which her father interprets as rooted in “some form
of private salvation” (112). Later, Bev reiterates Lucy’s position of privacy when she tells Lurie
“you weren’t there […] You weren’t” (140), which echoes Lucy’s earlier “you don’t know what
happened” (134). This outrages Lurie because he is “being treated like an outsider” (141). This is
precisely the point. Lucy refuses to “come out before these strangers” (132) because they are
strangers to her experience and to her pain. In her silence, she exercises her “right not to be put on
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trial […] not to have to justify” herself (133). In this way, she is not unlike her father in his own
“trial”— both are holding fast to a vision of themselves that is contradicted, or derailed, by the
events. Both silences are a mask: “Lucy’s secret, his disgrace” (109).
In contrast, Elleke Boehmer has read Lucy’s silence as embedding “in herself, her body,
the stereotype of the wronged and muted woman, the abused and to-be-again-abused of history:
she becomes, in a phrase, the figure of a double silence” (349). Boehmer’s reading of Disgrace
critiques the implications of Lucy’s silence as implying “as ever” the idea that women are
required “the generic pose of suffering in silence” (350). This view echoes the novel’s own
narration:
Bev responds only with a terse shake of the head. Not your business, she seems to
be saying. Menstruation, childbirth, violation and its aftermath: blood-matters, a woman’s
burden, women’s preserve. (104)
But we can also read Lucy’s need for silence as tied into her own conception of herself,
and not, as Boehmer’s paper suggests, as an allegorical representation of Melanie or of all
women. After all, Melanie did lodge a complaint and we are told she appeared before the
committee of enquiry the day before Lurie (48). Lucy’s silence is distinct from Melanie’s silence.
Rather than become another statistic, it offers Lucy a means to safeguard her own individual
identity, and to keep her private identity separate from the public domain. The manner of her
rape, commencing as it did with an invasion of her private space (her home), and by numerous
men means that the event, her body and her persona have been rendered public on numerous
levels. To amplify this, she later comes into contact with one of the men in public at Petrus’s
party, further intensifying the degree to which her private pain has become a public matter. Lucy
attempts to safeguard, and perhaps recuperate, her dignity by treating her rape as private. In this
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way she is implicitly not “taking on this doglike status” (348) or “becoming reconciled to the
point of conventional object” (349), as Boehmer suggests, but rather retains her own subjective
story and separates herself from a sexual act that has otherwise been described in animalistic
terms:
“You think they will come back?”
“I think I am their territory. They have marked me. They will come back for me.” […]
“They spur each other on. That’s probably why they do it together. Like dogs in a pack.”
(Coetzee 158-9)
And:
They were not raping, they were mating. It was not the pleasure principle that ran the
show but the testicles, sacs bulging with seed aching to perfect itself. (199)
As I stated previously, the mixing of mythic and animal elements in the retelling of events
is not flattering to human agency or to ideas about the scope of what is perceived typically as
“human.” All the previous examples are alike in that they highlight the animal within. That these
negative descriptions come up in times of violence or suffering is telling. When Lurie finds one of
the rapists, Pollux,8 spying from a window on Lucy who is in the shower, the insult he screams
repeatedly is “You swine! […] You filthy swine!” (206). He later refers to him as being “like a
jackal sniffing around, looking for mischief” (208). When Lucy’s wrapper slips loose to reveal her
breasts, Pollux looks on “unashamedly” (207). His lack of shame here is linked to something
being “wrong with him, wrong in his head” (207). Denied a position as a thinking, rational
individual, he is instead relegated to the domain of animals: he can feel when he is hurt and
react—“‘Ya, ya, ya, ya , ya’ he shouts in pain” (207)— but his mental deficiency recasts him, too,
as “morally deficient” (209). In this way, he is seen as less-than-human. Lucy’s protection of him
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is equally incomprehensible to her father and he links it implicitly to a dysfunctional mental state:
“more and more she has begun to look like one of those women who shuffle around the corridors
of nursing homes whispering to themselves” (205). The grotesque results of human and animal
mingling finds its culmination in Lurie’s dismayed avowal that “like a weed he [Pollux] has been
allowed to tangle his roots with Lucy and Lucy’s existence” (209).
It is not only Lucy’s rapists that are described as “animalized humanity.” Lurie’s own
desires, for instance, are also linked to animals. His own analogy between the “excited and
unmanageable” golden retriever and himself is an example (90). He, too, is berated for not
“learning his lesson” and is told by Melanie’s boyfriend to “stay with your own kind” (194). In
fact, Lurie’s desire for Melanie, which is described as “the seed of generation, driven to perfect
itself, driving deep into the woman’s body, driving to bring the future into being” (194) is a
precursor to his thoughts about the rapists “mating” with his daughter (199). The distinction here
is that Lurie embellishes his desire in lofty quotations: “sooner murder an infant than nurse
unacted desires” (69). These may veil, but do not diminish, his sense of shame.
We can view shame in The Unbearable Lightness of Being and in Disgrace as singularly
attached to the body, its functions and to the exposure that it is bound to by merely being a body.
Here, I am thinking specifically of Judith Butler’s conception of the body as that which shatters
the boundaries between an inside (the private) and the outside (the public): “this disposition of
ourselves outside ourselves [which] seems to follow from bodily life, from its vulnerability and its
exposure” (25). Fundamentally, language (in bodily descriptions, Lurie’s embellishment, or
Lucy’s silence) becomes a constituent of the body and of the safeguarding against shame. Both
novels mark the public arena as a threatening locale; it is here that one’s shame is exposed. The
infringement of one’s private persona threatens not only one’s privacy, but one’s own sense of
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being “human.” I have argued that more than threatening this recognisable, yet difficult-to-explain
border between the human and the animal, this web depicts its porosity, its constructed nature, and
also its flexibility. This sheds light on the artificiality of the vision du monde in which the animal
and the human are separate and disconnected entities. The links between the body, sex and shame
also threaten a conception of the human, and in so doing exposes animal traces within its domain.
The fact that it can be threatened shows that it is not static or stable, and importantly, that
debunking myths about what it means to be human has political implications. These can alter not
only interactions between those considered normatively human, but also our connections and
relations with animals as well. One way to acknowledge this connection is to do so via the body,
because if humans can feel shame (or joy, friendship, pain, fear, loss), so can animals. This
acknowledgement requires a change in action, which can also be thought of in bodily terms if we
consider the implications of eating meat and our quotidian use of animal products. Both novels
show us that the sounds, acts and thoughts that bridge the divide between humans and animals are
often misread (by characters in the novels and by critics of the novels), or otherwise read in
predominantly negative terms. Those that speak only in the vocabulary of humans are deaf to the
language of animals— which we, too, posses.
Notes
1 In The Sexual Politics of Meat Adams claims that Genesis is set in the “meatless Garden of
Eden” and that eating meat— that is, the killing of animals for food— can be read “as the cause
of the Fall" (Adams, 1990, p. 125).
2
He is, of course, not alone in this view. Elspeth Probyn’s Blush: Faces of Shame (2005), a
wonderful and sensitively-written account of shame in different social and emotional spheres,
acknowledges that perhaps humans are not the only beings to feel shame (2005, pp. 3, 163-164
n.3), but relegates the possibility of shame in animals to a footnote and views it ultimately as one
among other “interesting” ideas (2005:13). In the end, she too shares the opinion that shame “is a
fact of human life” and “is an important resource in thinking about what it means to be human”
(2005, p. xiii). She makes the important point that “we miss a great deal when we disregard our
human similarities […] we are much more alike than we are different—whatever the measure of
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difference: gender, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and so on” and that we “must use shame to reevaluate how we are positioned in relation to the past and to rethink how we wish to live in
proximity to others” (2005, pp. xiii-xiv), but does not move on to think about how shame can be
used to situate the animal and the human in closer proximity and to see how it can be used to
acknowledge that our relationship to animals is exploitative, oppressive and violent.
3
I am thinking here specifically of the following type of comments: “Just as people of colour do
not exist as resources for whites, or women for men, so other animals do not exist as resources
for human beings” and “By analogy, why think that permitting ‘gentler’ rape or ‘more humane’
slavery would lead to the absolute prohibition against rape and the total abolition of slavery?”
both from Tom Regan and Gary Francione’s “The Animal Rights Movement Must Reject
Animal Welfarism” in Animal Rights: Opposing Viewpoints (1996, pp. 195, 196).
4
For an exciting and invigorating array of essays devoted to the links between queer and critical
animal studies see, for instance, Volume 10, issue 3 (2012) of JCAS.
5
The concern with privacy and the individual is also discussed by Kundera in Testaments
Betrayed (see especially 259-261). Here, Kundera articulates shame as “one of the key notions of
the modern era” (1996, p. 259).
6
I am thinking here of Derrida’s description of “naked” words, implying honest ones,
from The Animal that therefore I Am.
7
See, for instance, pages 47, 165, 179.
8
His name also bears significant mythical roots. See Cooper (2005, pp. 32-35).
References
Adams, Carol J. The Sexual Politics of Meat. 1990. New York: Continuum, 2000. Print.
Agamben, Giorgio. The Open: Man and Animal. Trans. Kevin Attell. Stanford: Stanford UP,
2004. Print.
Boehmer, Elleke. “Not Saying Sorry, Not Speaking Pain: Gender Implications in Disgrace.”
Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 4.3 (2002): 342-351. Print.
Butler, Judith. “Violence, Mourning, Politics.” Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and
Violence. New York: Verso, 2004. 19-49. Print.
---. Bodies that Matter. 1993. New York: Routledge, 2011. Print.
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Coetzee, J.M. Disgrace. London: Vintage, 1999. Print.
Cooper, Pamela. “Metamorphosis and Sexuality: Reading the Strange Passions of Disgrace.”
Research in African Literatures. 36.4 (2005): 22-39. Print.
Derrida, Jacques. The Animal that Therefore I Am. Trans. David Wills. New York: Fordham UP,
2008. Print.
Eagleton, Terry. “Estrangement and Irony” Salmagundi 73 (1987): 25- 32. Print.
Freud, Sigmund. “The Sexual Life of Human Beings.” 1917. The Complete Introductory
Lectures on Psychoanalysis. Trans. James Strachey. New York: Norton, 1966. Print.
Gurstein, Rochelle. “The Waning of Shame in Modern Life: Kundera's Novels as a Case Study.”
Social Research 70.4 (2003): 1259-1276. Print.
Kundera, Milan. The Unbearable Lightness of Being. 1984. Trans. Michael Henry Heim. New
York: Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 1999. Print.
---. Testaments Betrayed. 1993. Trans. Linda Asher. London: Faber and Faber Limited, 1996.
Print.
Kristeva, Julia. Powers of Horror. New York: Columbia UP, 1982. Print.
Probyn, Elspeth. Blush: Faces of Shame. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota Press, 2005. Print.
Regan, Tom and Gary Francione. “The Animal Rights Movement Must Reject Animal
Welfarism.” Animal Rights: Opposing Viewpoints. Ed. E. Andrew Harnack. San Diego,
CA: Greenhaven Press, 1996. Print.
Ryder, Richard D. "Speciesism Again: the Original Leaflet.” Critical Society 1.2 (2010): 1-2.
Print.
Scarpetta, Guy. “Kundera’s Quartet (On The Unbearable Lightness of Being).” Trans. John
Anzalone. Salmagundi 73 (1987): 109-118. Print.
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Smith, Jonathan Z. “The Garments of Shame.” History of Religions 5.2 (1966): 217-238. Print.
Velleman, J. David. “The Genesis of Shame.” Philosophy & Public Affairs 30.1 (2001): 27-52.
Print.
Wiegandt, Kai. “J.M. Coetzee’s ‘Dog-Man’ and the Cynicism of Disgrace.” Anglia: Journal of
English Philology 131.1 (2013): 121–140. Print.
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Fishing in Fiction: A Critical Animal Studies Analysis of Fishing in Two Examples of
Popular Fishing Literature
Donelle Gadenne*
Abstract: Fishing is a powerful social and psychological signifier in modern Western society.
Fishing literature is a popular genre that often incorporates depictions of fish and fishing in
association with explorations of the human condition, including ideas about religion, masculinity
and nature as therapy. This paper explores the ways that such associations often neglect to
acknowledge the fish as representative of embodied animals with the capacity to feel pain and
suffer.
Keywords: Fly fishing, fishing literature, fish welfare, literary animal representations
Introduction
Fishing is a powerful social and psychological signifier in modern Western society. Fish
are associated with symbol and sanctity, motif and myth, food and festivity, pet and pastime.
Depictions of fish and fishing also appear frequently in print, suffusing the genres of fiction,
nonfiction, autobiography, instructional literature, and sports literature. Many autobiographical
and semi-autobiographical texts about fishing share one important trait in addition to positioning
fish and their capture as a key focus. They suggest, often in their titles, that fishing is linked with
the search for the meaning of life. Examples include John Gierach’s Sex, Death and Fly-Fishing
(1990), Jeremy Paxton’s Fish, Fishing and the Meaning of Life (1995), Dan Keating’s Angling
Life: A Fisherman Reflects on Success, Failure and the Ultimate Catch (2011), and Fly-Fishing
– The Sacred Art: Casting a Fly as a Spiritual Practice (2012), written by Rabbi Eric
Eisenkramer and Reverend Michael Attas. These narratives, along with a number of fictional
texts that have emerged in the last few decades, belong to a subgenre of narrative fiction that
Donelle Gadenne is a graduate student in English at the University of Canterbury, in association with the New
Zealand Centre for Human-Animal Studies. She has also worked in the veterinary industry for twenty-two years.
Email: donellegadenne@gmail.com
*
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might be called “fishing literature.”
Certainly, fishing is a pastime that seems to offer more than just a way to gain a meal, or,
as David James Duncan phrases it, to “feed not just the bodies but the souls of fly fishers” (302).
For those who do not catch fish, fishing literature provides a way for the uninitiated to participate
in the existential journey through others. However, fishing literature also highlights the complex
set of cultural meanings that attach to fishing – the way this practice relates to ideas about
humanity, animality, modernity, culture, and nature. Adrian Franklin explains that national
discourses determine why fishing and hunting occur in different countries, though there are
common themes (359-63). One such theme is fishing as an escape of modern life and a
reconnection with nature; another theme involves the relationship between fishing and
masculinity.
While fishing is a prolific endeavor worldwide that takes on various forms, my focus is
fly fishing, that is, recreational fishing with a line, hook, and artificial lure in place of live bait.1
Fly fishing is a style of sport fishing in which the focus is on skill, pleasure, and recreation rather
than hunting fish for the purpose of trade or subsistence.2 While the term “fishing literature”
encompasses non-fiction and autobiographical works, I have chosen to analyze depictions of
fishing in two acclaimed novels situated within the subgenre of fishing literature: Norman
Maclean’s A River Runs Through It (1976) and David James Duncan’s The River Why (1983). It
is important to study novels because they are a popular form of cultural narrative and thus are
linked to history and culture. As Philip Armstrong states, “Literary texts testify to the shared
emotions, moods and thoughts of people in specific historical moments and places, as they are
influenced by – and as they influence – the surrounding socio-cultural forces and systems” (4).
This means that depictions of animals in fiction have the power to impact the way that a society
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considers and treats animals in reality. Therefore, after outlining how these novels are based
around themes relating to Christianity, nature therapy, escapism, atavism, fraternity, and
masculinity, I adopt a Critical Animal Studies perspective to argue that the fish depicted in these
narratives have become so imbued with meaning that we are obstructed from considering the
animal beneath.
Fishing and Christianity
A River Runs Through It is a semi-autobiographical novella that follows the life of two
brothers, Paul and Norman, who are raised in Montana, fishing the Blackfoot River. The
majority of the story takes place around 1937 when Norman and Paul are in their thirties.
Growing up, the boys are close and practice catechisms, fly fishing, and fist fighting together. As
they mature they grow apart, and Paul leads a dual existence: he is a respected journalist, loving
son, gifted fisherman, and Norman’s younger brother, but also a compulsive gambler, heavy
drinker, and pugilist. Norman and his father use fishing as a way to connect with Paul and
reunite the family through their shared devotion to fly fishing. When Paul is murdered in 1939,
Norman reflects on their fishing trips. He is haunted by the inadequacy of his efforts to help
Paul, yet finds comfort in the memories of fishing the Blackfoot River.
Maclean opens with the line: “In our family, there was no clear line between religion and
fly fishing” (1). Sons of a Scottish minister, Norman and Paul spent a comparable number of
hours learning about fishing as they did studying religion. The relationship between Christianity
and fishing is strong in this novella, just as it is in Western culture. Indeed, fishing and
Christianity have a history of being coupled (Kroupi 107). Significantly, the acrostic symbol
associated with the ancient Greek word ichthys (fish) has long been used as a signifier for Jesus
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Christ. Biblical references to fishing lead Peter Hathaway Capstick to surmise, “It’s pretty clear
that God held fishermen in quite high esteem; or maybe it was just their patience. In any case, an
awful lot of Disciples fished full time” (144), and one cannot overlook the “fishbasher,” a
gruesome weapon also known as a “priest,” in reference to Catholicism and the delivering of last
rites.
The link between fishing and Christianity is also reinforced in The River Why when the
protagonist, Gus Orviston, declares “moral condemnation of fish killing doesn’t get far before it
runs smack up against Jesus himself, who fed fish to the multitudes” (Duncan 133). Set in
Portland, Oregon, Duncan’s novel follows the life of Gus, the son of fishing-fanatical parents
Henning Hale-Orviston and Carolina Carper Henley. Gus finds himself caught between the
relentless competitive banter between his mother – a staunch bait fisher – and his father, who is a
devout fly fisherman. Tired of the bickering, Gus leaves home to live in a cabin near a river he
calls the “Tamanawis.” Here he spends his days in relative isolation, fishing while contemplating
the meaning of life. Gus’s idyllic existence soon changes as he experiences insomnia and
depression. When he discovers a corpse in the river he begins to question God and obsess over
his own mortality. The many people Gus encounters while fishing the Tamanawis each teach
him something about what it means to be human, but it is only when he finds love with Eddy, a
gifted fisherwoman, that he feels genuinely fulfilled.
In addition to reinforcing the link between fishing and Christianity, these narratives
allude to the influence of Isaak Walton’s The Compleat Angler. Walton’s 1653 treatise comprises
instructional fishing passages, pastoral drama, verses, biblical proverbs, and social-political
commentary, and is credited as being the most influential published work on fly fishing.
Walton’s text was the first to present angling as “equally a philosophical as much as a physical
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pursuit,” which led to its being credited with “the historical development of angling” in England
(MacGregor 308). Mark Browning states that Walton’s text was a “coded message to Anglicans,
with Anglers serving as a not-too-subtle metaphor for his fellow-believers”; thus, just as “the
early Christians used the sign of the… [fish] to camouflage their activities, so does Walton some
fifteen centuries later use fish to camouflage his Anglican spirituality” (25, 26). This constructs
Walton as a kind of piscatorial priest and his anglers as members of a covert priesthood. In
Walton’s own words, “God never did make a more calm, quiet, innocent recreation than
Angling,” and he privileges angling over other forms of hunting because “water is the eldest
daughter of the Creation, the Element upon which the Spirit of God did first move” (262, 185).
Allusions to Christianity and The Compleat Angler underpin the sentiment that recreational
fishing is a means to heal the wounds and ease the stresses caused by modern life in these
examples of fishing literature.
Fishing and Nature Worship
As well as Christianity, there is another form of worship present in Duncan’s novel.
“Nature religion” is a loosely constructed covenant largely associated with the 19th century
transcendental movement. The transcendental movement, led by Ralph Waldo Emerson, was
largely responsible for the idealization of nature as a place where transcendental experiences
were most likely to occur. The sacralization of nature saw the wilderness replace the church for
many people, including American Transcendentalist writer, Henry David Thoreau. Thoreau’s
Walden, published in 1854, is one of the most celebrated literary nature treatises, and has been
strongly associated with spiritual approaches to nature ever since. In Walden, Thoreau records
his experience living for two years in a small cabin in the woods a mile from his hometown of
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Concord, Massachusetts. Thoreau presents his sojourn in nature as an experiment to illustrate
that aspects of civilization are harmful to humanity, and show nature as the best place for
humans to live an authentic life and experience transcendence. Similarly, in The River Why, Gus
leaves home to live alone in a cabin by a river. He states that his aim is to escape his urban woes
and seek answers to the meaning of life in nature (Duncan 55). Familiar with The Compleat
Angler, he asks, “Who is this ‘God of Nature’” that Isaak Walton constructs in his treatise, and
he wonders why in all his time fishing he has never encountered Him (Duncan 37). There are
multiple allusions to Walden in The River Why; for example, Duncan borrows Thoreau’s chapter
title, “Where I Lived, and What I Lived For.” This indicates that Duncan is comparing Gus’s
sabbatical to Thoreau’s nature experiment. Both Thoreau and Gus abandon urban environments
to sojourn alone in nature, and this constructs immersion in nature as a mode of escapism.
The Transcendentalists believe nature is the place to experience transcendence, and Gus
Orviston does indeed have a transcendental experience in nature. After some time fishing the
Tamanawis alone, Gus encounters a fisherwoman named Eddy. The two enter into a romantic
relationship, and when Eddy reveals that she must leave Gus for a brief trip to Portland, Gus
feels dejected. On the day of her departure, Eddy and Gus are fishing and they hook a Chinook
salmon. Eddy tells Gus to “play” the fish and then leaves him beside the river. Gus decides to
fulfill Eddy’s parting wish and remembers that Eddy said to “play” the fish and did not say to
“catch” it (Duncan 269). He keeps the fish hooked but not reeled in for many hours and is
transported some distance down the Tamanawis. Through this extended connection with the
Chinook via the fishing line, Gus feels reconnected to the power of nature, as if he and the fish
are one entity. Gus enters the water and approaches the exhausted fish feeling “[m]oved and
shamed by the animals’ [sic] trust” (Duncan 275). This is a significant passage in Duncan’s
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novel because it demonstrates how depictions of fishing are linked with Christian ideology. The
location here is highly symbolic. Samuel Snyder explains:
Water is just such a physical structure, into which baptism not only offers
opportunities for purification, but also a more embodied connection to the physical
reality of the divine…[F]ly fishers elevate water as the most holy symbol next to the
fish itself, equating wading into rivers to a form of self-induced baptism. (905)
Gus leans in to touch the fish and narrates, “My face entered the river; I felt my ears fill; the
water poured in at the neck of my coat and ran freezing down my chest” (Duncan 277). Deeply
moved by the encounter, Gus walks home through the mist along a deserted road. Having been
“reborn,” Gus now experiences transcendence. He feels a sharp pain, which he likens to a hook
being placed in his heart, and visualizes a thread connecting his body to the earth and sky. He
falls to his knees as a hand rests “like sunlight” on his head (Duncan 278). Gus refers to a
“nameless presence,” an “Ancient One,” and although it is unclear who or what this
manifestation is, to Gus it is Divine. This passage demonstrates how fishing literature often
suggests that escaping from civilization into nature and engaging in the act of recreational fishing
can lead one to achieve spiritual and emotional rebirth.
Fishing as Therapy
Viewing nature as a remedy has long been considered a reaction to modernity. Bull
writes that the “sense of escape from the hectic existence of life or modernity into the calmness
sedateness, peacefulness of angling is an important facet of the angling experience” (456).
Kimmel and Kaufman suggest that in response to the pressures of industrialized civilization
“more and more men sought the tonic freshness of the outdoors to offset the daily routine of
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‘brain work’” (13).3 Furthermore, Ortega y Gasset claims that hunting results in happiness
because it brings a rare pleasure that daily chores and mundane tasks, which are an “annihilation
of our real existence,” frequently steal away (36).
A River Runs Through It spans thirty years, during which time many significant events
took place, such as the end of the First World War, the Prohibition era, the Great Depression, the
rise of technology, and the industrial revolution. Consequently, the first half of the 20th century
included periods of displacement, unemployment, and economic hardship for many workingclass families. Norman considers the Blackfoot River as a refuge from civilization. He says, “I
took my time walking down the trail, trying with each step to leave the world behind” (Maclean
37). In these narratives, the Blackfoot River and the Tamanawis are the antitheses of the modern
industrialized world. Norman and Gus seek the peace and calmness afforded by nature, and view
fishing on their rivers as a way to escape from the struggles associated with their complicated
modern lives.
Angling as a way to heal psychological problems is a recurrent theme in A River Runs
Through It. Norman states that his two default methods of helping someone are to offer them
money or take them fishing (55). When discussing Norman’s brother-in-law Neal, Paul asks,
“Do you think you should help him?” to which Norman replies that he is helping “By taking him
fishing” (47). Norman invites Paul fishing in the hope that spending time together fishing the
Blackfoot River will facilitate a discussion about Paul’s gambling and drinking problems, two
subjects that Norman finds difficult to broach since Paul is evasive and defensive. Then, in a
passage where Norman collects Paul from the police station after Paul is incarcerated for
assaulting a publican, the sergeant warns Norman that his brother’s addiction to stud poker will
land him in trouble. He tells Norman that he helps his own troubled brother by taking him fishing
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(24). Patrick Dooley observes that the poignancy of A River Runs Through It stems from the fact
that “in a family that conflated sporting activities with spiritual ones, the family’s proscribed
remedy for helping someone — ‘take them fishing’ — was tragically inept” (165). Despite the
“remedial” fishing expeditions, Paul’s troubles escalate and his problems result in his murder.
Fishing and Masculinity
The relationship between hunting and masculinity is a well-researched aspect of culture
and sociology. Jacob Bull identifies the importance of “success” as a common masculine theme
associated with angling. He observes that in many angling stories, themes about “heroic duals
with nature abound” (450). Certainly, heroics, crusades, and tales of triumph pervade the factual
and fictional accounts of anglers. Epic battles between man and marine creatures appear in
fishing literature spanning centuries. Consider Herman Melville’s 1851 Moby-Dick and Ernest
Hemingway’s 1952 tale, The Old Man and the Sea. The modern battlefield in A River Runs
Through It is the Blackfoot River and the fly fisher’s opponent is the Eastern Brook Trout. Big
rivers are the best, and the mighty Blackfoot is certainly a formidable river. In the novel, Norman
boasts that the Blackfoot “is the most powerful, and per pound, so are its fish” (Maclean 12). The
river “roars” and is “no place for small fish or small fishermen” (15). The bigger the river, the
bigger the fish, which facilitates the type of epic battle the heroic angler seeks in order to
conquer nature and reinforce masculine identity. Conquering big fish as a way to reinforce
masculine identity is an idea present in many examples of fishing literature. In A River Runs
Through It, Norman and Reverend Maclean watch Paul casting out. Norman narrates,
“Everything was going into one big cast for one last big fish” (97). Shortly thereafter, Paul hauls
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in a fish so enormous that had “Romans been watching they would have thought that what was
dangling had a helmet on it” (99-100).
Size matters in The River Why. As Gus Orviston claims, “Statistics are a tool upon which
anglers rely so heavily that a fish story lacking numbers is just that: a Fish Story” (Duncan 15).
Indeed, fish are described according to their dimensions throughout Duncan’s novel. They are
called “ten-pounder,” “seven pounds, eleven ounces,” “a beautiful 3½-pound cutthroat” and
“seventeen-inch fish” (Duncan 17, 61, 84, 210). Maclean’s characters fixate on the dimensions
of fish. This is evident in statements such as “nice-sized but not big – fourteen inches or so” (61).
Bull explains that this is because “the angler is searching for a particular fish, a fish that success
and masculinity can be measured against” (451). This is certainly the case in Hemingway’s tale,
as Santiago fantasizes, “My big fish must be somewhere” (35), and in regard to Moby-Dick, one
could hardly choose a larger opponent than an unusually large whale.
The significance of catching big fish in Maclean’s and Duncan’s novels seems related to
ideas of primordial virility. Marti Kheel states that many hunters claim that “the primeval,
animal-like aspect of hunting is experienced as an instinctive urge, which, like the sexual drive,
cannot and should not be repressed” (“License to Kill” 89). Thus, it is perceived that man’s
primal, intrinsic compulsion towards competition and aggression requires an outlet. Michael S.
Kimmel and Michael Kaufman discuss the claim that hunting is natural and necessary so that
masculine impulses can be exercised in a manner that is not harmful to humans or human society
(5). The idea that channeling aggressive energy towards fish through fishing is a more preferable
outlet for settling male grievances than by violence between men is reflected in A River Runs
Through It when Paul, who is a masterful fisherman, draws on his talent at fly fishing rather than
his boxing prowess to dominate other males. Whenever confronted or challenged by a rival,
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Paul’s standard response is “I’d like to get that bastard on the Blackfoot for a day, with a bet on
the side” (6). Citing Paul Shepard, American environmentalist and author of The Tender
Carnivore and the Sacred Game (1973), Kheel explains how hunters often claim that hunting is
in their biology; that they are, according to author Paul Shepard, “genetically programmed to
pursue, attack and kill for food. To the extent that men do not do so they are not fully human”
(Shepard, cited in Kheel, “License to Kill” 90). According to Spanish Philosopher José Ortega y
Gasset, author of Meditations on Hunting (1972), the constitution of hunting has not only been
constant but has barely changed over time: “The only difference is in the weapon, which then
was the bow and arrow, while now it is the rifle” (58); or in regard to angling, it was once twine
and a hook carved from bone, and now it is an “ultralight six-foot flyrod, tied on a barbless #28
Midge” (Duncan 73).
Critiquing these kinds of essentialist claims, Kheel explains that “sport hunting
imaginatively recaptures a time when it is believed that men had to hunt for reasons of survival”
(“The Killing Game” 33). It is a long-held stereotype that men must hunt to provide food for
their family; thus, women are genetically wired to seek men who hunt well. Robin Shelton,
whose book The Incomplete Angler explores his personal experiences as an angler, claims that
once he embarks on a fishing expedition the integrity of his manhood no longer depends upon his
car, cash balance, or sexual aptitude, but rather upon how many fish he catches (90). He
measures his success as a male against the size of his catch when he states a “two-pound pollack
wasn’t going to lure anyone back to my cave” (90). In A River Runs Through It, Norman also
touches on this stereotype when he claims that “[t]o women who do not fish, men who come
home without their limit are failures in life” (46). The Maclean boys look “with contempt upon
the husbands of wives who have to say, ‘We like the little ones – they make the best eating’”
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(12). In The River Why, Henning Hale-Orviston, upon returning from a cancelled fishing trip
empty-handed, feels emasculated by Carolina, who in three hours manages to haul home “55
pounds of prime meat” and slap a three pound slab of salmon on his dinner plate, which he is
said to eye “like it was a turd” (Duncan 59). In each of these examples, success as a man is
dependent upon the ability to catch fish, preferably big fish, as this is a measure of one’s
masculinity.
Kimmel and Kaufman discuss some reasons why twentieth-century men might have used
angling to reinforce masculine identity. The effects of the Industrial Revolution increased the
time men spent working in urban environments, and this proved problematic because it was
commonly thought that modern culture was feminizing them by “turning the heroic warrior into
a desk-bound nerd” (Kimmel and Kaufman 12). Turning to nature in order to re-masculinize is
also employed by adult males through the “mythopoetic men’s movement.” Bull states that this
term denotes the increasing number of men who sought to create “a tribal scenario” in which
urbane males sought to dominate nature and connect “to a timeless, animalistic order” (448).
Masculine congregation in the wilderness, performing activities away from females and
feminized spaces, facilitates the validation of masculine identity, which must necessarily occur
outside of the home in the presence of other males because, as Kimmel and Kaufman state, men
“must be validated by other men; women cannot validate manhood” (4-5).
Angling often involves not only groups of adult males but also fathers and sons. During
the Industrial Revolution, young boys were supposedly at risk because while fathers were away
working, sons were left dangerously exposed to the female-dominated, domestic domain. Kheel
writes of the belief that boys, “in order to identify as male…must deny all that is female within
themselves, as well as their involvement with allof the female world” (“License to Kill” 105).
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Thus, as Bull explains, in the masculine doctrine of angling, it is characteristic that the “adult
male [takes] the boy away from the feminised space of the home to be immersed in nature and
pass on masculine knowledges” (451). To counteract what Kimmel and Kaufman term
“destructive effeminacy,” when men of the Industrial Revolution were at home, they felt the
need to fortify their sons’ masculinity by taking them fishing (14).
In all these ways, then, the two novels under discussion here show angling functioning as
a kind of fraternity, involving adult males as well as fathers and sons. Certainly, the idea of
fishing as a fraternity was espoused by Isaak Walton, the creator of perhaps the best-known
treatise on recreational fishing. Much like the fish in fishing literature, however, Walton’s
treatise is infused with layers of meaning. In addition to being a book about fishing, Paula
Loscocco explains, “the Angler not only entertained royalist readers living in internal exile
during the Cromwellian 1650s, but also conveyed to those readers what it understood to be
England’s religious and cultural traditions” (501). While The Compleat Angler is shot through
with words and phrases possessing double meaning, those unaware of, or unconcerned with, the
psalmic underpinnings, or who are not reading the treatise as a polemical text, might just read it
as a book about the importance of fishing and fraternity to men’s physical and psychological
wellbeing. When Walton has Piscator declare “I am (Sir) a brother of the Angle” (175), the
brotherhood in the first instance is a reference to the Church of England (Loscocco 503).
Nevertheless, Walton’s use of the term brotherhood also reinforces the idea of fraternity, which
unites certain people with shared beliefs and excludes others. For example, Walton’s
brotherhood is united in its hatred of otters, who steal fish who would otherwise be caught by
the angler (175). Walton also identifies those who scoff at the art of angling as outsiders; such
people Piscator says are “enemies to me, and to all that love vertue and Angling”: they are “an
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abomination to mankind” (176). In A River Runs Through It, the Maclean family fishing
fraternity also has its members and its outcasts. Even the legendary Isaak Walton sits outside of
the Maclean fishing fraternity, as Reverend Maclean declares him a farce, an “Episcopalian and a
bait fisherman,” thus simultaneously a traitor to Christianity and fly fishing (5). When Neal
arrives in town, Paul declares, “I won’t fish with him. He comes from the West Coast and he
fishes with worms” (9). Neal exists outside of the fly fishing fraternity, and therefore, must
necessarily be situated outside of the Maclean family fraternity because in this narrative, the two
are inseparable. Since these traditional forms of fraternity – religious and hunting – are easily
recognizable as domains where men typically bond over a shared interest, the aspects familiar to
each one is readily interchangeable with aspects of the other.
Reading Fishing Literature from a Critical Animal Studies Perspective
As detailed above, there are numerous associations in fishing literature that connect
recreational angling to the spiritual and psychological experience of being human. However,
whether or not recreational fishing has significant therapeutic, spiritual, or social properties, as
Harold F. Blaisdell states, “All the romance of trout fishing exists in the mind of the angler and is
in no way shared by the fish” (53). The narratives examined here demonstrate vividly some of
the ways in which fish and fishing become imbued with social, cultural, and spiritual meanings
through associations with religion and ideas about psychological remediation and reinforcement
of gender identity. Beneath these meanings, however, is the reality of recreational fishing
practices. While the fish in fictional narratives are not real living animals but are rather
depictions of fish, these novels accurately represent an activity that is, in reality, no less brutal
than other hunting methods, which employ rifles, shotguns, spears, knives, or crossbows. In fact,
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these other hunting weapons have the capacity to kill relatively quickly, so by comparison,
fishing with a line and hook, which to a greater or lesser extent derives sport from the extended
duration of “playing” the fish, is arguably more brutal. It is with this in mind that I now proceed
to examine Maclean and Duncan’s narratives, adopting an animal-standpoint perspective.
Authors of fishing literature often allocate pages of text to descriptions of the pursuit of
fish, while dealings with the killing of them are often brisk or omitted. This is because the death
of the fish is secondary to the themes dependent upon the pursuit, anticipation, excitement, ritual,
and skill involved in fishing, and because the killing is not essential to reinforcing how this blood
sport supposedly facilitates the human-nature reconnection. There is little, if any,
acknowledgment of how the hunt for fish concludes, perhaps because where realistic depictions
do appear they are violent and unpleasant. In A River Runs Through It the deaths of fish are
generally omitted; however, on one rare occasion, Norman places a captured fish on a sand bar.
When it begins to thrash he perfunctorily explains, “I managed to open the large blade to my
knife which several times slid off his skull before it went through his brain” (19). Often, the
captured fish are not killed immediately and are instead put in the basket while still alive. This is
evident by the mention of Norman’s basket “thumping on the rocks and falling on its side” (88).
This narrative disregards the negative experience of fish through being hunted and treats the
killing of fish superficially. There is no discernible moral tension in regard to the welfare of the
fish being hunted for sport, therapy, or as a way to reinforce one’s male gender identity.
In The River Why, the activity of “playing” the fish, that is, the period of time from when
the fish is hooked to when it is reeled in, is often described in poetical, humorous, or idealized
ways. For example, Gus explains:
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…a big blueback went flying across the rivertop in a noble but whimsical attempt to
escape its plight by transforming itself into a bird: it entered the air over a dozen times,
but each flight was shorter, the longed-for-wings remained fins, and at last I hauled it
ashore. (Duncan 84)
Admittedly, Gus is an amusing character, but this example illustrates how the brutal nature of
angling is often trivialized in fishing literature. By making the comparison to graceful bird flight,
this passage becomes a dismissive rendering of an animal’s struggle for survival as the fish’s
traumatic experience is belittled. In a similar example from A River Runs Through It, Maclean
writes, “The fish made three such long runs before another act in the performance began.
Although the act involved a big man and a big fish, it looked more like children playing” (98-9).
Here, “playing” the fish is likened to theatre and a playground scene. Then there is the passage
where Norman reminisces about the last time he went fishing with Paul: “This was the last fish
we were ever to see Paul catch…we never saw the fish but only the artistry of the fisherman”
(100). In this example, Norman remembers Paul’s final “catch” but not the fish or its undeniably
traumatic experience and death. The fish is an aesthetic object – it is admired and treated as an
object of art. It is merely a testament to Paul’s skill and mastery so that “the fish” as a fish
disappears.
Although fish are not always considerately represented in The River Why, there is
certainly more attention paid to their experiences than in A River Runs Through It. Gus often
acknowledges the brutal nature of fishing, and there are multiple examples that reveal Gus feels
guilt over fishing practices. The evening before he departs for the Tamanawis, Gus dines with his
family. Carolina pesters him to tell the story about the time he caught a gigantic, record-breaking
bass. He initially refuses, but relents, and explains that the fish was well known to locals, who
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had named him “Garbage Gut” because he was often seen picking over human garbage floating
in the lake. When Garbage Gut gorges Gus’s hook, Gus observes how the fish seems to just give
up: “like he couldn’t believe what I had done to him, like I’d betrayed him” (Duncan 64). Gus
says, “I dragged him in like a toy boat on a rope. And I saw what a helpless little thing he was.”
Then, Gus explains that “the bass started thrashing because the hook was tearing through his
insides” (64). Once reeled in, Garbage Gut is killed by a third party who cusses him all the while
taking his life. When the fish is publically gutted, a plethora of human rubbish is found in his
stomach, a fact the gathering crowd finds hilarious. Gus states he was appalled by the way the
people lampooned the fish, who had been assisting them by cleaning up the lake they had
polluted. As they had all laughed, Gus had wanted to cry. When Henning suggests Garbage
Gut’s death was a blessing because the fish was a disgrace to the “game” andthat Gus did
everyone a favor by preventing his presence from fouling up the lake, Gus is furious. He calls his
father a “fishing Fascist…a flyrod Nazi,” and says “every fish but trout or salmon and everybody
but flyfishermen are niggers and Jews, and wetbacks to you!” (66). Gus’s story and his reaction
to the deplorable way Garbage Gut was treated demonstrates that he is aware of the brutality of
fishing practices, and also of the inherent value of the individual nonhuman animal’s life.
There are further instances in the novel where Gus expresses guilt over catching and
killing fish. For example, when he catches a cutthroat he states, “Soon as I had it in my clutches I
found myself pitying it…Despising myself, disobeying myself, I grabbed driftwood and killed it”
(84). Moreover, when he accidently throws pellets in his aquarium with trout blood on his hands,
“Alfred the Great,” a three-inch steelhead smolt whomGus took from the river and a natural prey
species of the trout, makes a frenzied attempt to escape and in the process is so severely injured,
he dies. This distresses Gus and he gets drunk. He says, “Then Alfred, Garbage-Gut, all the fish
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I’d ever killed began to haunt me” (86). Despite his remorse over Alfred’s death, Gus continues
fishing, which is what he is doing when he discovers the body of a local man, named Abe,
floating in the river. While dragging Abe’s corpse back to civilization, Gus remarks how the
dead man’s face shared the “same astonished expression” that he had “seen on the faces of a
million spent fish,” which disturbs him (95). Contemplating Abe’s death forces Gus to confront
his own morals and mortality. He states, “Suddenly it hit me what a pathetic lot we fishermen
were. We sneaked, pursued, teased, deceived, tormented and often murdered the objects of our
obscure lust; we compounded our crimes by gloating over them” (109). Gus’s realization is quite
remarkable, and he goes on to state something similar:
…let me remember myself down there fishing, maiming and murdering trout like
enemies in wartime, ticking them off my Log by the thousand, robbing them of all
dignity at death by stuffing them, still thrashing, into my creel, or tallying them like
downed bowling pins before flinging them back into the water pierced and bleeding
from my hooks, weakened by my clutching hands, stunned by the too-rare air. And
never a thought about the suffering they endured for my amusement. (132)
Then, through what he deems “de-fished” eyes, Gus feels compelled to release the two-inch
minnow he calls “Sigrid the Small,” also captured from the wild, for his aquarium. The story
about Garbage Gut, Alfred the Great’s death, and the epiphany that ensues from discovering
Abe, each illustrate Gus’s moral ambiguity over angling practices. However, the moral tension in
The River Why is transient, as despite the many occasions leading us to believe that Gus comes to
view recreational fishing as a morally reprehensible activity, he goes on to tutor children in
fishing, to manufacture fly fishing equipment, and to marry a fisherwoman with whom he
continues to hunt fish.
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The way that this novel deals with Gus’s recognition of the brutality of angling practices
is through a correlation being drawn between human and fish life cycles and the realities of life
and death. Gus explains that life is a continuous ritualistic cycle: “…a human child at birth
undergoes a ritual almost identical to that inflicted upon trophy trout at death…the fish is
whacked on the head, thus putting it out of its misery; the infant is whacked on the behind, thus
initiating it into its misery (15). Mortality is a major theme in this novel as Gus undergoes an
epiphany that sees him cease dwelling on his own inevitable death and the deaths of those he
loves, and instead, appreciate the wonders of life and accept his mortality. When Abe’s facial
expression reminds Gus of all the fish he has killed, he is reminded how little control humans
have over their mortality (112). Accepting this makes it easier for him to rationalize killing fish
because all living things must die eventually, and whereas anglers may not control the
circumstances of their own death, they do have power over whether fish live or die. To exercise
this control, however, the angler cannot be sentimental. Gus admonishes himself for naming and
caring for the fish in his aquarium (87). This rejection of sentimentality may explain the most
disturbing passage in the novel, where Gus teaches six local children how to catch fish. Initially,
the children are filled with innocent wonder and ask Gus what fish are. Then, when a boy aptly
dubbed “Hemingway” hooks a fish, Gus explains that the fish must be “put out of its misery.”4
The children squabble over who gets to club the fish, and Gus says, “I found a priest myself,
handed it to Hemingway, and he adroitly dispatched his prize then cradled and cuddled and
cooed it like a babe in his arms” (206). The passing of the priest to the uninitiated male child
illustrates the ritual of learning about life and death. As Kheel explains, “Hunting and killing
animals is a standard rite of passage out of the world of women and nature into the masculine
realm” (“License to Kill” 106). Certainly, the way that Hemingway nurtures the fish after
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violently killing that fish demonstrates his naivety and is a final glimpse of innocence before his
initiation into “manhood” puts an end to any developing sentimentality.5
Fishing Literature and Critical Animal Studies
Fish do not attract as much attention as do birds and mammals when it comes to matters
of animal welfare, and there are various explanations for this. To begin with, hunting fish is not
typically called hunting; it is called “fishing” or “catching”; therefore, pursuing and killing fish is
not often thought of as hunting, despite shared traits between angling and game-hunting
practices. This means that anti-hunting sentiments do not always extend to include fish and
fishing. Furthermore, fish are more difficult to anthropomorphize than are mammals owing to
their “alien” appearance. Victoria Braithwaite, author of Do Fish Feel Pain? says that “being
part of a subaquatic world that we can only temporarily visit makes it difficult for us to relate to
fish” (137). Pet fish live in ponds, tanks, and bowls and this inhibits intimacy as fish cannot offer
human beings the same degree of physical affection as can warm-blooded, terrestrial pet species.
As Gus Orviston says, a fish is not “the kind of pet you can ride, take on walks, set on your lap,
dress in a sweater, take pheasant hunting or cuddle; it is not likely to lick your face” (Duncan
74). Frans de Waal explains that it is identification and familiarity that enhances the empathic
response in humans (213); thus, when humans find it difficult to identify with fish because they
seem so unfamiliar, then empathetic responses towards fish are unlikely to occur.
On the other hand, empathizing with fish might seem problematic to many people who
suggest that to do so constitutes anthropomorphism. James D. Rose argues that when humans do
anthropomorphize fish, they confuse “unconscious nociception from conscious pain and
unconscious emotions from conscious feelings” (152).6 In his opinion, fish are not conscious
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beings, and therefore they cannot experience pain; however, he does believe that they are
vulnerable to “indices like physiological stress or disturbed reproduction or maladaptive
behaviour” (Rose 152). Nevertheless, rather than rule out the possibility of fish pain altogether,
he states that it is “unlikely that fishes could have consciousness or a capacity for pain or
suffering meaningfully resembling what we know” (148, emphasis added). Despite their
divergences, Rose and Braithwaite agree that we may never fully realize the degree unto which
fish feel pain and suffer. However, I tend to agree with Braithwaite, who suggests that at this
stage it is unwise to deny fish consideration simply because we cannot know what it feels like to
be a fish, or because we can never directly experience what they experience (9).
Literary depictions of fish and fishing warrant close and ongoing study for the same
reasons as many Critical Animal Studies scholars explore representations of other animal species
in Western culture. Nik Taylor states that Critical Animal Studies scholars aim to “keep real,
embodied animals at the forefront” and to do this “necessitates political action on their behalf”
(158). Margo DeMello explains that a task of Animal Studies scholars is “to deconstruct [social]
constructions: to unpack the various layers of meaning that we have imposed onto animal bodies
and try to see the animal within” (16). Critical Animal Studies scholars have identified numerous
examples in Western culture where certain groups of animals are bestowed with culturally
constructed meanings that often hinder us from recognizing animal abuse. Carol J. Adams, for
example, argues that animals called “livestock” are “absent referents” in slaughterhouse
discourses (303-4). Lynda Birke discusses how laboratory rats and mice become invisible when
cast as “potent symbols of scientific endeavour” in scientific discourses (211). Similarly, I
maintain that fish become absent referents when depictions of recreational fishing serve to
reinforce ideas about humans bonding with nature or present fishing as a means to ease the
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worries and stresses caused by modern life. The only real difference is that Adam’s “livestock”
and Birke’s “laboratory mice” are actual animals, whereas the fish in fishing literature are
depictions of real animals. Nevertheless, in each case, the nonhuman animal is effectively
subsumed by the meaning imposed. Whether the situation involves slaughterhouse sheep,
laboratory mice, or the depictions of fish caught for enjoyment in fishing literature, the animal is
being used as a means to an anthropocentric end.
Acknowledgements
I convey my deepest gratitude to Associate Professor Philip Armstrong for his expertise, advice,
and assistance with preparing this paper, and thank Annie Potts and Philip for their continuous
support.
Notes
1 Many recreational anglers practice catch and release fishing. This form of fishing is not
discussed in this essay because the anglers in the focal novels are not identified as catch and
release anglers. Contrary to popular belief, catch and release fishing is not unproblematic where
fish welfare is concerned. See Braithwaite (169-171) and A. Dionys de Leeuw (1996).
2
Subsistence fishing involves catching, killing, and consuming fish as an essential food source.
In this essay, where fish are caught primarily for recreation, with consumption being a secondary
motivation, it is not considered to be subsistence fishing.
3
Today, many women also practice recreational angling (Crowder 2002).
4
Hemingway in this passage, of course, is a reference to author Ernest Hemingway, who was an
avid proponent of hunting.
5
In What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity, Philip Armstrong discusses how
“emotionally laden relationships between humans and animals” were increasingly viewed as
“immature and unrealistic” by modernists during the early-mid twentieth century (134).
Sentimentality was thought best confined “to the socially disempowered spheres of feminine
domesticity, maternity and child-rearing” (Armstrong 134).
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6
Nociception is the term used to describe the body’s unconscious “detection or perception” of
noxious stimuli (Braithwaite 32).
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York: Lantern Books, 2013. Print.
Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. New York: Oxford UP, 2008. Print.
Walton, Isaak. 1653. The Compleat Angler, 1653 – 1676, edited by Jonquil Bevan. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1983. Print.
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“This Image Cannot be Displayed”: Critical Visual Pedagogy and Images from Factory
Farms
Troy A. Martin*
Abstract: In the context of recently proposed “ag-gag” legislation, this paper treats images of
farm animals in modern agriculture as contested sites of education. Images of factory farming are
distributed in efforts to illuminate disturbing and violent practices behind the walls of farms,
hatcheries and slaughter plants. These images are intended to evoke critical consciousness and
questions of ethics among the food-consuming public. Scholarship in critical and visual
pedagogies, difficult knowledge (Britzman), traumatic education (Felman), a “politics of sight”
(Pachirat) and political aesthetics (Rancière) may help educators and activists develop critical
reflection about how they use images of factory-farmed animals. By bringing these and other
scholars into conversation about representations of factory-farmed animals, the author explores
the political and educational limitations and possibilities of deploying such images. Pedagogies
that address common responses to disturbing images -- such as avoidance, resistance, sympathy,
uncertainty, and anxiety – provide theoretical foundations and insight for educators and activists
who want to educate food consumers and change the practices of factory farming. Whereas fixed
ideology diminishes ground for new meaning-making, ethical anxiety denotes instability and
opens space for possibility, education and change.
Keywords: factory farms, visual pedagogy, critical pedagogy, difficult knowledge
Disturbing images of farm animals are distributed by organizations to lift the closed walls
of the meat and dairy industries for public view. To document and expose animal cruelty in
modern farming, organizations, filmmakers and activists capture and distribute images that may
stir, shock, or repulse the consumer public. Classroom educators also take up these images as
texts and invite critical analysis in courses as diverse as ethics, food politics, psychology, cultural
studies and women’s studies. Factory farm images, typically filmed through undercover
investigation, are intended to supply missing information about everyday practices in modern
agriculture. They are shown to disclose a troubling reality, to rupture everyday food routines of
production and consumption and to open the possibility of ethical revelation. In this paper I
*
Troy A. Martin is a PhD candidate in the Department of Educational Leadership and Cultural Foundations, The
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Contact: tamartin@uncg.edu
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theorize images from factory farms as sites of education. As sites of education, images from
factory farms should not only be understood politically but also aesthetically and pedagogically.
A politics of sight and public opinion must reckon with resistance to difficult knowledge without
lapsing into spectacle. Viewing images of farm animal suffering suggests a subjective confluence
of learning and refusing to learn, anxiety, ideology and ethics. I connect a field of scholarship in
visual pedagogy, which experienced a resurgence following the widely viewed images of
prisoner abuse in the Abu Ghraib jail, with educational foundations in critical pedagogy and
“difficult knowledge” (Britzman 100). In this paper, I do not provide a semiotic analysis of
images from factory farms. Indeed, semiotic analysis would add useful specificity to this
theoretical and pedagogical study. Rather, I explore pedagogical possibilities and limitations
within uses of disturbing visuals and ponder the ethical aesthetics of images that are routinely
distributed by animal rights and welfare organizations. To conclude, I describe progressive
aspects of difficult knowledge and visual pedagogy that may be useful to activists and educators
who use disturbing images of factory-farmed animals.
Images from Factory Farms as Contested Sites of Education
Images from factory farms are sites of education, in part, because they disclose the
material conditions and social relations of food production that are actively concealed from
public view. They are sites of education because they call us to witness non-human others living
in states of pain, torture, confinement and misery. As such, they challenge us to consider the
standpoint of the non-human other. For both reasons, these images are contested sites of
education. They are contested on the production side because the agricultural industry leverages
its power to keep them hidden. They are contested as subjects of study because bringing down
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the walls of the factory farm is not the same as bringing down the walls and operations of
speciesist ideology. It is also not the same as healing or reconnecting the sense of loss or anxiety
that such images may evoke. Images from factory farms are contested sites of education, as well,
because they challenge the “cultural hegemony of meat,” which encompasses an “ethos of
commercial consumer culture that aggressively endorses meat eating” (Rowe 3).
“Ag-gag” Legislation, Visual Blackouts, and Information Outages
Just as the consumer public has come to expect direct access to information about food
products, “ag-gag” legislation pushes a capitalist, police-state technique by attempting to
criminalize activities that “threaten” to provide the information that the public expects. Through
the model Animal Ecological Terrorism Act and subsequent state animal use protection statutes,
collectively referred to as “ag-gag” legislation, legislatures weigh economic interests of
agribusiness against public interests concerned with making informed decisions about purchases.
In a consumerist democracy one’s purchase power has been elevated to the right of free
expression, but that doesn’t stop corporate lobbyists. Anti-whistleblower laws have been written
into state statutes in order to block public knowledge about routine cruelties in slaughterhouses,
hatcheries and modern farms (American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals). In a
review of state animal use protection statues, Girgen explains that they are designed to shield
designated animal uses and industries (e.g. animal research and animal agriculture) from actions
that target them. Under the Animal Ecological Terrorism Act criminal actions could include “the
taking of photographs, documentary footage, or other media for the purpose of exposure” (Clark
333). Due to so-called defamation protections, these images could be prohibited regardless of
content or manner of distribution (Clark).
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The legal structure for ag-gag legislation is built upon the “property status” of animals.
As chattel, farm animals are only seen in the eyes of the law in terms of relational injury to their
human owners (Clark). As well, farm animals are not included in most state animal cruelty
statutes. California’s 2012 ban on the sale of products derived from force fed birds is a
promising exception and an outcome of increased public awareness about force-feeding practices
in the production of foie gras. Currently, the ethical question of farm animal suffering has few
legal avenues. Legal proceedings would, in the least, shed public light on the conditions that
agribusiness imposes on animals. Those practices now remain relatively hidden (Clark).
As with other social-change movements, legal code tends to catch up to popular thought
on civil issues after persistent struggle and mounting public outcry. Clark highlights powerful
visual elements in the civil rights movement:
Without the capacity to publish these acts of violence against animals, the
propensity for success through civil disobedience is critically undermined. … Had
the black and white television sets of the 1960s America shown only marching
civil rights activists in the thousands without the violent display their peaceable
assembly was met with, people would not have recognized the need for change as
quickly. (340-1)
Ag-gag legislation aims to impede that process. Pachirat explains, “… [A]n assumption of
‘power through transparency’ also motivates those who fight to keep the slaughterhouse and
related repugnant practices quarantined and sequestered from sight” (247). Agribusiness defends
more stringent “animal use protection statutes” by claiming that their entire industry has been
targeted by “people who are opposed to using animals for food under any circumstance”
(National Chicken Council). State Senator David Hinkins, who sponsored Utah’s ag-gag
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legislation, said it was aimed at the “vegetarian people who are trying to kill the animal industry”
(Legal Monitor Worldwide). Public advocate and author Jim Hightower criticizes industry
politicians for protecting food giants like Tyson Foods, Smithfield and Borden. He remarks,
“Their abusive industrial system is so disgusting that America’s consumers would gag at the
sight of it” (A17).
In 2013 increased efforts to prevent distribution of visual information about meat
production occurred through the introduction of fifteen “ag-gag” bills in state legislative bodies;
none passed (Barclay). Nonetheless, the majority of U.S. states have some form of animal use
protection law to address “animal enterprise/industry/research interference” (Animal Legal and
Historical Center; Girgen). While public discomfort over disturbing images is not new, efforts
to criminalize the documentation and distribution of such images point us closer to capitalist
totalitarianism in which corporate profit justifies legal enforcement of strategic information
outages and visual blackouts.
As crafted by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) in 2002, the strategy
behind the Animal Ecological Terrorism Act duplicates George W. Bush’s administration’s
response to images of tortured Iraqi prisoners. Focusing on the damaging criticisms that these
images brought to the war on terrorism and their “unpatriotic” (Sontag, 2004, para. 21)
distribution, the administration tried to redirect the public’s attention away from possible
meaning in these photos (ie. practices of torture and imperialistic U.S. foreign policy). As Susan
Sontag observes, they approached it as if the problem “lay in the images, rather than what they
depict” (para. 2). By way of comparison, the purposively named “Animal and Ecological
Terrorism Act” attempts to criminalize the distribution of factory farm images as a breach of
security, as a “terrorist threat.” It is only concerned with the intentions of the photographer (i.e.
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vegetarians who oppose using animals as food) and fails to address the photograph or the
photographed.
Visual blackouts and information outages are ongoing and interlocking, meaning they are
deployed from various, unrelated cultural institutions and bodies. For example, the “cultural
hegemony of meat” (Rowe) is reproduced through different institutional bases of power. In
North Carolina the Humane Society of the United States sued the Raleigh Transit Authority
when ads depicting images of pigs in gestation crates were not allowed on city buses, because
they were “too negative” (Campbell). This illustrates how the transportation authority lends its
power in support of modern agriculture. Additionally, media industries have routinely refused to
accept paid advertising that visually (or verbally) describes meat production on the grounds of
not meeting “standards” (PETA, 2009).
“A Politics of Sight”
Seeing through the walls that conceal the operations of modern farming accesses a social
reality for the consumer public, who is already sympathetic to concerns about animal welfare and
treatment. While photography and video are no longer thought of as unquestionable
representations of reality (due to increased understanding of the photographer’s perspectival
choices and the possibilities of digital manipulation), they can initiate ethical anxiety and critical
education.
In framing a “politics of sight,” Pachirat imagines a world that is “organized around the
removal, rather than the creation, of physical, social, linguistic, and methodological distances”
(240). He conjures a superpower – the ability to see through walls and view what has been
concealed behind them. In discussing a “politics of sight,” he shares evidence that the routine
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concealment of disturbing content is actually a symbiotic part of a relationship that yields our
shock and repugnance upon seeing that which had been withheld. Without concealment, he
suggests, representations of suffering and pain lose their intensity and capacity to affect people
through shock (253). For example, in response to viewing video testimony of the Holocaust1 in a
graduate seminar at Yale, one student remarked, “Viewing the Holocaust testimony was not for
me initially catastrophic – so much of the historical coverage of it functions to empty it from its
horror” (Felman 55). In other words, the ethical reflex of sight diminishes with increased
exposure. In an information-rich, consumer society the cultural saturation of images and mass
consumption of the spectacular contribute to moving relations in a politics of sight.
Despite the “impulse to link sight” or illumination with political and ethical response,
Pachirat describes a symbiotic relation between sight and concealment. He argues that the
“frontiers of repugnance” and generation of pity (through shock and disgust) expand due to “the
operations of distance and concealment that we have recognized as the primary mechanisms of
the civilizing process” (251). From Pachirat’s perspective, dismantling the walls of factory
farming by displaying disturbing images of farmed animals does not directly lead to learning or
transformation. Nonetheless, after working in a slaughterhouse for five and a half months,
Pachirat demonstrates the problem of continued distance and concealment. He concludes by
suggesting “… a context-sensitive politics of sight that recognizes both the possibilities and
pitfalls of organized, concerted attempts to make visible what is hidden and to breach, literally or
figuratively, zones of confinement in order to bring about social and political transformation”
(255). Pachirat acknowledges the complications of visual representation. While large-scale
dissemination of factory farm video may elevate awareness of industry practice in public
consciousness, there is no straight path between public awareness and social change. I believe
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that critical pedagogy, in both theory and practice, may help educators and activists navigate this
quandary.
Among a growing number of academics and activists, critical pedagogies have been
extended beyond human struggles to enkindle change in the lives and conditions of factoryfarmed animals, who clearly suffer and have few legal protections. Sometimes taken up under
“critical animal studies,” pedagogical questions include: How might visual information of
animal suffering (e.g. video footage of animals in factory farms) be used effectively in a project
of critical consciousness? How do both constructed separations (e.g. hierarchical distinctions of
intelligence) and irreducible differences between humans and non-human animals reconfigure
liberation pedagogies? In this paper, I focus on the former question and understand critical visual
pedagogy as a tool for reflectively thinking through how images from factory farms are deployed
as liberatory, educational strategies.
In the next section of this paper, I engage pedagogical and psychoanalytic insights on
difficult knowledge, trauma and testimony to trace anxiety relations in the psychic dimensions of
learning. I also explore embedded ideology in visual texts in light of Rancière’s writing on
ethics, aesthetics and politics. In the final section, I describe progressive aspects of difficult
knowledge and visual pedagogy that may be useful to activists and educators who use disturbing
images of factory-farmed animals.
Difficult Knowledge, Ideology, and “Infinite Justice”
How do consumers of products from factory farms view and understand slaughterhouse
images such as the ones that appear in disturbing films like Farm to Fridge (Mercy for Animals),
Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home (Laveck & Stein) or Glass Walls (PETA, 2010)? After
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covering eyes and mouths with pained expressions, what happens next? Some have said that if
hatcheries and slaughterhouses had glass walls, we’d all be vegetarian. This suggests that the
brutality of a concealed practice, once revealed, induces individual ethical response. However,
not all people who see disturbing representations from factory farming become vegetarian or
vegan. Some, perhaps many, are aware of what takes place behind the closed walls and do not
(or cannot) discuss it or deal with it in meaningful ways. How do we handle exposure to photo or
video representations of a painful reality? How do ideological and psychic frameworks interact
with the “difficult knowledge” of animals in modern agriculture?
Physical response to viewing slaughterhouse images may include covering one’s eyes or
mouth, looking away, crying, feeling nauseous and other forms of embodied disgust. These
responses may resonate with how some view photographs from the Abu Ghraib prison -- but not
necessarily so. Contrary to being troubled or moved by brutal images of war and abuse, Heybach
describes her students’ reactions as “immediate dismissal and hostility” (24). After visiting an
art exhibit, Globalization and War: Its Aftermath, with works by Chicano artist Malaquias
Montoya, her students questioned the artist’s legal status in the U.S. and suggested that he go
back to where he came from (24). Rather than dealing with possible meaning in Montoya’s art,
Heybach’s students reacted from an ideological register by attacking the artist. Discussing
images of prisoner abuse from Abu Ghraib, Kear describes images as “fixed ideologically” in a
“figuration of a resilient national identity” (115). He describes the “ideological
instrumentalization” of the image in the context of a “theatrical economy” that privileges “the
production of affect over the attribution of meaningfulness” (115).
The ideology of a visual text (e.g. photograph) can operate to shut down the possibility of
learning through reductive self-validation of pre-existing attitudes and beliefs. Garoian and
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Gaudelius explain how images produce contradictory social effects. “As visual pronouncements,
images are ideological; they teach us what and how to see and think” (24). Internalized as onedimensional identity, ideology has strong mediating-effects on how one reads an image. I will
offer a personal example that is directly related to the display of gruesome images. When I see
images of mangled, unborn fetuses in advertising space (e.g. billboards, print magazines, the
internet or public transportation), I am not open to consider these images for what they are, but,
rather, I immediately figure them within an ideology and politics of groups like National Right to
Life.2 In doing so, I am refusing that which is before me (the image) and only know it through an
internalization of its ideopolitical landscape. As such, the fetus image evokes a prefigured
response. Whether I resist or embrace the ideopolitics of the image does not matter, because the
encounter has been vacated of potential for education and transformation.
Rancière’s framing of a contemporary ethical turn describes the overdevelopment of
ideological constraints and the collapse of ethics. He says, “On the one hand, the instance of
judgment, which evaluates and decides, finds itself humbled by the compelling power of the
law” (110). In this case, the law supports the property status of animals and allows few
protections for farm animals. Thus, the law supports an ideological norm of speciesism.
Rancière continues, “On the other, the radicality of this law, which leaves no alternative, equates
to the simple constraint of an order of things” (110). In effect, to approach ethical possibility
within the visuals of farm animal images, the viewer must develop distinctions between fact and
law. Critical visual pedagogy may deepen consciousness of distinctions between fact and law.
“The growing indistinction between fact and law,” Rancière warns, “gives way to an
unprecedented dramaturgy of infinite evil, justice and reparation” (110).
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To draw Rancière and Kear together, politics tend to divide us by fixed ideology, while
ethics dissolve into indistinction. So, the viewer’s viewing of a disturbing image is filtered and
flattened through ideopolitical constructs. The viewing renders a response, which differs from a
meaningful interpretation of what the image depicts and short-circuits possibilities for ethical
meaning or revelation. I question if video footage of animals in factory farms has reached
ideopolitical symbolism, like the unborn fetus has? Does the representation of suffering
disappear once it saturates social space and becomes mere symbolism in a political agenda?
While the suffering of a non-human animal can register in our consciousness as concern,
pain or outrage, it must work its way through speciesist hierarchies, which determine how we
evaluate and draw distinctions in given situations. When canine or feline members of our
families are shown to be suffering, our concern may register differently than when faced with
confined chickens in a hatchery. As well, the wretched conditions of chicken production may
concern us differently than seeing crickets farmed, roasted and ground into flour meal as a
sustainable source of protein. In other words, hierarchical speciesist ideology provides a constant
frame from which to distinguish and gauge response. The pinnacle of a hierarchical pyramid is
an impossible place to have a mutual encounter with a non-human animal other.
Regardless of whether one believes that farmed animals are sentient beings deserving of
lives free from confinement and misery or one believes that their lives only have value as raw
material for human consumption, images have the capacity to disrupt belief and ideology.
Organizations that seek to prevent cruelty to farmed animals want to disrupt the dominant
speciesist ideology that supports passive acceptance of farm animal suffering. The primary tactic
for doing so involves illuminating scenes of animals from inside the walls of factory farms and
distributing those scenes to disturb the public. Barthes describes the photograph’s capacity to
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“prick” or “wound” the viewer (Fried 542), and Sontag (2003,103) adds that such pricking may
supply an initial spark. To disrupt everyday ways of seeing that are fixed in ideology and to
realize the pedagogical potential of disturbing slaughterhouse images beyond the spectacle, what
must happen?
First, the actual images (not their ideopolitical symbolism) must enter the viewer’s
consciousness. The capacity to disturb a viewer into sympathy, pity, anxiety or action only exists
when everyday passivity is moved to conscious engagement. Preconscious avoidance that blocks
the image isn’t an act of resistance or ideological dissonance. Rather, it’s a subconscious turning
off and shutting down. Market researchers make a living by understanding approach/avoidance.
They describe some images as causing a viewer to “lean in” and learn more. According to a
market researcher with fifteen years of experience, Elma Winters3 (personal communication,
March 27, 2014), these kinds of images (e.g. babies or baby animals) trigger a “hardwired”
protective response. Other images (e.g. suffering animals) trigger an “avoid” response. While
discussing recent advertisements from the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (ASPCA), Winters remarked that viewers may not be able to engage the message
through images of neglected animals. She said, “So, they watch it and somewhere in the process
of watching it, they subconsciously stop listening to it because it’s overwhelming, and their
subconscious is really going into that avoid mindset” (personal communication, March 27,
2014).
Market researchers and educators, alike, don’t want to prompt outright avoidance when
providing subject matter for viewers. However, similarities between advertising and educating
are tenuous at best. While paid advertising generally tries to influence consumer behavior in a
specific way within a thirty to sixty second window, meaningful education involves a lengthy
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process of engaging subject matter (including oneself), holding uncertainty and integrating or
rejecting new knowledge. The curtain of mass advertising reflects and obfuscates in deceptive
ways. Education is directed at raising and unraveling deception, even when the process is
painful.
Building scholarship on disturbing education, Deborah Britzman centers uncertainty
within a pedagogical, psychoanalytic circuit. According to Britzman, “within the imaginary of
learning … uncertainty is what education feels like” (98). With this in mind, it is clear that quick,
precise answers deployed to resolve uncertainty and delivered through pleasing imagery have
limited relation to education. Nonetheless, the neurology of avoiding disturbing images is worth
noting for organizations that choose to use advertising practices, such as television commercials,
for social messaging.
Treating slaughterhouse images as a site of education, as a disturbing visual pedagogy, is
not a comfortable education. Britzman challenges the notion of knowledge as “experience
without frustration: a thing waiting to be picked up or delivered” (104). To the contrary, she
joins other scholars, like Shoshana Felman, and posits a relationship between crisis and
education (109). Britzman and Felman’s focus on a psychoanalytic pedagogy of “difficult
knowledge” helps us to understand how resistance and anxiety operate at the location of images
of factory-farmed animals.
When looking at photographs of human pain or farm animal pain, we are asked to make
meaning from the “ravages of human induced suffering” (Britzman 100). This is a form of
witnessing. Britzman theorizes through a frame of rapprochement and alienation.
Rapprochement involves our attempts to reconcile emotional uncertainties. We feel “both the
fatigue of limit and the excitement of potential” (101). We feel the nausea of disgust as well as
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the pangs of awareness that call us to learn more. We’re horrified, and we cannot turn away.
With hands covering our mouths, we stare at footage of pigs who are unable to stand or move
within the tight confines of their crates. Perhaps, we, too, feel unable to move.
One possible outcome from rapprochement is that we settle uncertainty with sympathy or
pity. Sympathy allows us to break down emotional uncertainty by situating ourselves as
uninvolved bystanders. In her seminal text Regarding the Pain of Others, Sontag states, “So far
as we feel sympathy, we feel we are not accomplices to what caused the suffering. Our
sympathy proclaims our innocence …” (2003, 102). Innocent distance maintains the separation
that Debord describes as essential to the spectacle. Hence, a sympathetic response to farm animal
images may work to maintain separation between meat production and consumption. Sympathy
and pity help settle emotional uncertainty; we eschew additional engagement with the subject
matter; further action is not immanent; change is not realized.
I think of my mom – a person with deep love for animals, especially the dogs and cats
who share her home. Growing up we always had a stray dog that my mom had invited home. She
also received recognition as volunteer of the year at her local animal shelter. She regularly
expresses sympathy for mistreated or neglected dogs. She often mentions that she could be a
vegetarian. However, she says that she cannot deal with images of suffering animals and refuses
to view them. After seeing the previously mentioned ASPCA ads, she sent the organization a
donation with a note to express how upset she was with them for showing suffering animals on
TV. She may align her sympathies with animals in factory farms but falls short of eliminating
meat from her diet. She frequently orders chicken or fish, but not beef or pork, at restaurants.
When meals arrive she sometimes remarks that my vegetarian dish looks and tastes better than
hers. Is this performance for me? Do I remind her of her own rapprochement? My mother is
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neither wholly unaware of conditions in factory farms nor has she been fooled by the tidy
appearances of packaged meat. Rather, I suspect she thinks about meat consumption from an
emotional constellation of uncertainty.
Within an emotional constellation of uncertainty, Britzman explains that two variations of
uncertainty compete: “uncertainty over the value and valence of receiving new ideas and
uncertainty that signifies the anticipation of loss of love.” She describes the idea of love as “our
passionate attachment to others, ideals and roles” (103). Feeling ill by new ideas and knowledge
(e.g. a photo from within the walls of a factory farm) is, thus, psychically rooted in loss – the loss
of our former selves, the loss of certain relations, the loss of meaning that routine and habit
provides. Still thinking about my mother, I wonder how objects of love are symbolized and how
slaughterhouse images threaten those symbols. My mom repeatedly remarks, “I could be a
vegetarian if it weren’t for your father.” What does that mean? Perhaps her traditional role as
wife, nurturer and maker-of-meals is threatened by the possibility of changing food and cooking
habits. To work through various fragments – her love and concern for suffering animals, her role
as wife, her awareness of factory farming, her decisions about food consumption – demands
emotional work and a “revolt of affect” (104).
I recently retold the above description of my mom’s ambivalence towards eating animals
at a conference. One audience member flatly responded, “Your mom is a murderer.” While taken
aback by the statement at the time, I share it here to connect Rancière’s “dramaturgy of infinite
evil, justice and reparation” (110) with the limitations of absolutism or fundamentalism in the
context of educational purposes. “Infinite justice” takes “shape as the necessary violence
required to exorcise trauma in order to maintain the order of the community” (113). “Infinite
justice” fundamentally requires the counter-forces of injustice and uses violence to crush
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perceived wrongs. “Infinite justice” requires “infinite evil.” If the “evils” of modern agriculture
are fought primarily with a contra-flow of violence (symbolic violence, secondary trauma and
accusations of murder), then the window for ethics and education becomes impossibly narrow.
Absolute certainty shutters all openings for learning. In contrast, uncertainty holds potential
energy and the possibility of meaningful learning.
The Spectacle and Critical Visual Pedagogy
Images of war and Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse flooded the media and circulated widely
during post-9/11 U.S. military action. Since 2004 scholars of visual and media literacy have
written extensively about the Abu Ghraib prisoner images as “public pedagogy” (Adelman;
Heybach; Garoian & Gaudelius; Giroux; Sontag, 2004). The substance of this body of literature
presses down on tensions between passive consumption of spectacle photography and
educational possibilities of engaging viewers in meaningful, active and transformational ways.
Highlighting visual and media literacies, Garoian and Gaudelius attempt to reclaim space
for “critical spectators” (25). They suggest that the spectacle pedagogy of visual culture can
occur in two opposing ways:
… [F]irst, as ubiquitous form of representation, which constitutes the pedagogical
objectives of mass mediated culture and corporate capitalism to manufacture our
desires and determine our choices; and second, as a democratic form of practice
that enables a critical examination of visual cultural codes and ideologies to resist
social injustice. (24)
By protecting the visual representations of meat (clean, cut, packaged and often already prepared
into cooked meals), agribusiness produces spectacle in the first way. They regulate images to
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maintain markets for meat consumption. I suggest that educators and activists develop critical
visual pedagogies in the second way. Critical examination of a cultural hegemony of meat and
speciesist ideology can occur visually without images of animals in factory farms. For example,
on two pages within Safran Foer’s Eating Animals (2009), a 67 square inch rectangle has been
printed within the margins of the book to illustrate the size of a “typical cage for egg-laying
hens” (79). This provides a visual/spatial representation of hen confinement without an actual
photograph.
If photo or film representations of meat production are chosen for educational purposes,
the photographed, the photographer and the photos are subject to critical reflection and
democratic practice. Without critical examination of photo images, we subjugate reality to an
ocularcentric gaze. The singularity of the Other (e.g. the individual farm animal) is subsumed
within blinding illumination. All farm animals are like this; all farm animals are supposed to be
like this – caged and confined, grown and consumed. Critiquing modern ocularcentric ways of
knowing, Nietzsche sought an “illuminating vision that flickers between presence and absence,
concealment and disclosure” (Lalvani 2). The flicker of uncertainty moves within and between
the photographed, the photographer and the photo. It traces relations and gaps, which seek
ongoing attention. In the remainder of this paper, I describe progressive aspects of difficult
knowledge and visual pedagogy that may be useful to activists and educators who use disturbing
images of factory-farmed animals.
1. Separation in Mediated Relations
Social relations that are mediated through photography and video are always subject to
spectatorship. Debord claims, “Separation is the alpha and omega of the spectacle” (13). U.S.
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citizens can view digital images from Abu Ghraib instantly, but the photographed and the viewer
simultaneously exist in vast separation and distance. By comparison, images of animals in
factory farms are deployed to bridge the gaps and distances between eating animals and
producing meat. Debord notes, “The forces that were able to grow by separating from each other
have not yet been reunited” (14). In a critical visual pedagogy of factory-farmed animals, the
relationship between the photographed and the viewer, a secondary witness to trauma, demands
attention. Distant relations are inconsequential; embodied, present, aesthetic relations matter.
Without pedagogical intention, the passivity and separation that characterize spectatorspectacle society has an anesthetic effect. Considering an environment filled with “spectacles of
terror and horror,” Heybach describes an anesthetic effect where images “lull citizens to sleep
with tragedy” and foster “a deep sense of powerlessness in the face of so much disorder” (23).
Heybach positions “critical aesthetic pedagogy” against anesthetic spectacle and explores
educational possibilities for transforming consciousness and democratic sensibilities (25). She
refers to Marcuse’s work on imagination and Freire’s “conscientization”4 to assemble a
foundation for critical aesthetic pedagogy. Visual imagery offers sense data, which according to
Marcuse, can be transformed through imagination. Heybach explains, “ … [T]he promise of
freedom exists in the human faculty of imagination rather than the ability to reason” (25). Thus,
the complex phenomenon of viewing an image taps individual capacity for imagination in
different ways than formal reasoning (e.g. animal rights philosophy). This affirms the place of
imagination in critical pedagogies to facilitate the possibility of change.
2. Testimony from Disturbing Images
Referring to her experience with teaching a graduate level course on testimony and the
Holocaust, Shoshana Felman argues that teaching is not an act of passively transmitting
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knowledge but, rather, teaching is making something happen through performative crisis. Just as
the subject of psychoanalysis acts out crisis with an analyst, teaching for social justice often
engages crisis to enable change. Felman writes, “Both this kind of teaching and psychoanalysis
are interested not merely in new information, but, primarily, in the capacity of their recipients to
transform themselves in function of the newness of that information” (53). She continues, “The
question for the teacher is, then, on the one hand, how to access, how not to foreclose the crisis,
and, on the other hand, how to contain it, how much crisis can the class sustain” (54). Similarly,
when viewers watch factory-farmed animals through video footage, they are learners who are
fully implicated in a crisis of witnessing. As Felman indicates, the teacher’s task is to
“reintegrate the crisis in a transformed frame of meaning” (54)
In her reflection of teaching through testimony and witness, Felman identifies three
aspects of testimony:
1. Healing – Testimony is a way to heal from traumatic events.
2. Concealment – Testimony refers to something hidden with a political dimension of
oppression.
3. Access to truth – Testimony is not a mode of “statement of,” but rather a “mode of
access to.” (16)
If I am to bring Felman’s work on education and crisis into conversation with the experience of
viewing images from factory farms, I must align Felman’s use of testimony and witness with
testimony produced through a camera lens aimed at factory-farmed animals. Witnessed by
viewers, what are these images a testament of? Pictures of factory farming function as testimony
insofar as they reference the concealed operations of factory farms and establish access to
common, disturbing practice. As to Felman’s first aspect of testimony, if representations of farm
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animals are providing testimony, how is healing involved? While the photographed may not
experience healing and has no input in her own representation (by being filmed, distributed and
viewed), the potential for healing might exist as a larger, incremental process of reunifying food
production and food consumption. Reunification deters passive consumption and unwitting
violence and supports cultural healing. The absence of such healing is noticeable and
consequential.
3. Ethical Anxiety
We should expect that viewing disturbing slaughterhouse images will be countered with
avoidance, negation and resistance. Self-protective strategies attempt to block new knowledge
from breaking existing webs of meaning. The pleasure principle demands the gratification of
immediate satisfaction while diminishing the pain and destruction of education (Britzman 109).
In the sense that “all learning is destructive,” we will “criticize, raise questions about it and doubt
it, and if the knowledge can survive this attack, it can be turned toward the self” (Britzman 204).
Britzman describes difficult knowledge as “the anxiety made from encountering broken
meaning” (109). “Alienation,” then, involves the work of connecting and reassembling
fragmenting things (112). Bringing disparate things into new relations of significance and
working through them attends to the pleasure principle as “an area of desire and the imagination
needed for thinking and experimenting with knowledge, experience and authority” (109). As
noted earlier, imagination holds space for freedom and liberation. Britzman reminds us that the
possibility of liberation follows anxiety and alienation.
Adrian Kear explores our anxieties about disturbing images. According to Kear, anxiety
“… creates the opportunity for a disruptively ethical experience of responsibility to emerge in
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place of the sentiment of pity” (108). Kear’s discussion of the “ambivalence of anxiety” and
Britzman’s attention to the “emotional constellation of uncertainty” describe the conditions
under which a powerful crisis of education can occur. Within anxiety, we might expect an
oscillation between illumination and concealment, looking and turning away (Parsons). Anxiety
and uncertainty open possibilities for change and transformation. If this is true, the encounter
with disturbing factory farm images does hold the potential to initiate ethical revelation and
responsibility.
Describing Heidegger’s work on the “stimmung of anxiety,” Kear says, “it is the
demonstration of a subjective ‘attunement’ to indeterminateness, a feeling of being ‘ill-at-ease’
[unheimlich] in the world as such” (111). For those who persistently work through resistance,
negation and sympathy, “ill-at-ease” may best describe the haunting knowledge of 24/7 farm
animal suffering. Separation has been reduced, at least for the conscious moment. The
slaughterhouse image recurs in the continual present – it is now and now, again and again. The
knowledge of ceaseless suffering, coupled with our habits and daily routines of food
consumption, heightens our indeterminateness. It forces a crisis of our ethical responsibilities.
Drawing from Levinas, Kear concludes, “Ethical anxiety therefore acts as a reminder of
responsibility: responsibility for the other – and the world – in their materiality” (113). It does
this, however, against loss, disconnection and alienation, which often follow witnessing trauma
(Felman). At this intersection of responsibility and loss, educators are responsible for attending
to students with care and compassion. Because reintegration requires time and presence,
educators and activists should be mindful of the importance of debriefing and processing
responses to disturbing images. As well, due to a significant number of people who have
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personal experience with violence, students should be cautioned and given choices about
viewing such images.
To conclude, I want to return to the scene of the factory farm. Do those who see inside
the factory farm witness countless testimonies -- not through language, but through the contorted
bodies of pigs in gestation crates or the pained faces of chickens undergoing debeaking? When
we poke holes through the thick walls of the modern slaughterhouse and invite others to look
inside, what kind of education are we inviting? The theorists and educators that I’ve included
suggest that we’re inviting a difficult one -- a disturbing and traumatic education. Animal
liberation education must consider pedagogy that anticipates multiple responses to difficult
knowledge. We must expect responses that are complicated by the terrains of subjective psyches
and fixed ideologies. As noted in this paper, these responses may include preconscious
avoidance, aggressive resistance, passive sympathy, ideological fixation and ethical anxiety.
Among these, anxiety holds possibility for ethical response and transformation. Ethical anxiety
denotes instability, in contrast to fixed ideology and identity, and opens space for creative ethical
possibilities. Critical visual pedagogy must maintain space where ethical anxieties can be held
and extended. As pedagogy, images of factory-farmed animals must be configured and
reconfigured in creative ways to hold the social reality of factory-farmed animals in public
awareness and, ultimately, to encourage critical consciousness and action.
Notes
1
Throughout this paper I draw from pedagogical scholarship on the Holocaust that addresses
how visual artifacts are used to learn about it. While some may object to comparisons between
the Holocaust and factory farming, I refer to Corinne Painter’s (2014) defense of the analogy.
2
Although not the focus of this paper, it would be remiss not to acknowledge similar uses of
disturbing photos by anti-abortion groups and animal rights groups. As well, legal restrictions
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and prohibitions on displaying such images have recently challenged both groups’ freedom of
expression. In 2012 a Colorado Court of Appeals ruled on Scott vs. Saint John’s Church in the
Wilderness and determined that there is a “compelling government interest in protecting children
from disturbing images” of mutilated fetuses or dead bodies (Liptak, para. 7).
3
Elma Winters is a pseudonym. My contact requested anonymity. She works for Proctor and
Gamble, a company that has a contentious history with animal rights organizations.
4
Darder, Baltodano and Torres (2003) describe Freire’s concept of “conscientization” as a
process of “deepening awareness of the social realities which shape their lives” and the discovery
of “their own capacities to recreate them” (14).
References
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<http://www.mercyforanimals.org/about-mfa.aspx>.
Adelman, Rebecca A. “Atrocity and Aporiae: Teaching the Abu Ghraib Images, Teaching
Against Transparency.” Cultural Studies – Critical Methodologies, 14.1 (2014): 29-39.
Print.
American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (2014). Ag-gag bills at the state level.
Web. 21 November 2014. <http://www.aspca.org/fight-cruelty/advocacy-center/ag-gagwhistleblower-suppression-legislation/ag-gag-bills-state-level>.
Animal Legal and Historical Center at Michigan State University’s College of Law (2014).
“State Ecoterrorism / Animal Enterprise Protection Laws.” Web.
<http://www.animallaw.info/articles/armpusecoterrorism.htm>.
Barclay, Eliza. “2013 was the Year Bills to Criminalize Animal Cruelty Videos Failed.” 27
December 2013. Web. <http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/12/19/255549796/ 2013was-the-year-every-new-ag-gag-bill-failed>.
Britzman, D.P. (2013). “Between Psychoanalysis and Pedagogy: Scenes of Rapprochement and
Alienation.” Curriculum Inquiry 43.1 (2013): 95-117. Print.
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---. “Teacher Education in the Confusion of Our Times.” Journal of Teacher Education, 51.3
(2000): 200-205. Print.
Campbell, Colin. “Humane Society Sues Raleigh for Rejecting Bus Ad About Caged Pigs.” The
News & Observer 23 August 2013. Web. <http://www.newsobserver.com>.
Clark, Kimberly Nicole. (2009). “No Democracy for Animal Lovers: The Exclusion and
Marginalization of Animal Rights Activists in America.” Whittier Law Review 31: 319343. Print.
Darder, Antonio, et. al. The Critical Pedagogy Reader. New York: Routledge, 2003. Print.
Debord, Guy. The Society of the Spectacle. London: Rebel Press, 1967. Print.
Felman, Shoshana. “Education and Crisis, or the Vicissitudes of Teaching.” Testimony: Crises of
Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis, and History. Ed. Shoshana Felman and Dori
Laub. New York: Routledge, 1992. 1-56. Print
Foer, Jonathan Safran. Eating Animals. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2009. Print.
Fried, Michael. Barthes’s punctum. Critical Inquiry 31.3 (2005): 539-574. Print.
Garoian, Charles R., and Yvonne M. Gaudelius. Spectacle Pedagogy: Art, Politics and Visual
Culture. Albany: SUNY Press, 2008. Print.
Girgen, Jen. “State Animal Use Protection Statutes: An overview.” Animal Law 18.1 (2011): 5774. Print.
Giroux, Henry A. “Education after Abu Ghraib: Revisiting Adorno’s Politics of Education.”
Cultural Studies, 18.6 (2004): 779-815. Print.
Heybach, Jessica.A. “Learning to Feel What We See: Critical Aesthetics and ‘Difficult
Knowledge’ in an Age of War.” Critical Questions in Education 3.1 (2012): 23-34. Print.
Hightower, Jim. “Ag-gag Bills: So Much for Sunshine.” Tulsa World, 2 May 2013, p. A17.
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Print.
Kear, Adrian. “The Anxiety of the Image.” Parallax 11.3 (2005): 107-116. Print.
Lalvani, Suren. Photography, Vision, and the Production of Modern Bodies. Albany: SUNY
Press, 1996. Print.
Laveck, J. (Producer), and Stein, J. (Director). Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home. 2012
[Documentary film]. USA: A Tribe of Heart.
Legal Monitor Worldwide. “The Terrible Price of Ag-gag Laws.” 17 May 2013, n.p.
Liptak, Adam. “In Abortion Protests, Which to Protect, Children or Speech?” The New York
Times, 13 May 2013. Web. 11 November 2014. <http://nytimes.com/2013/05/14/us/
church-suit-says-abortion-protest-upset-children.html>.
Mercy for Animals (Producer). Farm to Fridge. 2011. Web. <www.meatvideo.com>.
National Chicken Council. Web. November 11, 2014 from
<http://www.nationalchickencouncil.org/industry-issues/animal-welfare-for-broilerchickens/>.
Pachirat, Timothy. Every Twelve Seconds: Industrialized Slaughter and the Politics of Sight.
New Haven: Yale UP, 2011. Print.
Painter, Corrine. “The Analogy between the Holocaust and the Factory Farm: A Defense.”
Journal for Critical Animal Studies 12.1 (2014): 33-62. Print.
Parsons, Dennis. “Photography and Social Justice: Preservice Teachers and the Ocularized,
Urban Other.” Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy. Eds. Barbara Beyerbach and R.
Deborah Davis. New York: Peter Lang, 2011. 70-87. Print.
PETA. “NBC nixes family-friendly Thanksgiving Day Parade Ad.” 23 November 2009. Web.
<http://www.peta.org/blog/nbc-nixes-familyfriendly-thanksgiving-day-parade-ad/>.
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PETA (Producer). Glass Walls. 2010. Retrieved from <http://www.peta2.com/feature/glasswalls/>.
Rancière, Jacques. Aesthetics and its Discontents. Malden, MA: Polity Press, 2009. Print.
Rowe, Bradley D. “Understanding Animals Becoming Meat: Embracing a Disturbing
Education.” Critical Education 2.7 (2011). Retrieved from
<http://m1.cust.educ.ubc.ca/journal/index.php/criticaled/article/view/132>.
Sontag, Susan. Regarding the Pain of Others. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003. Print.
---. “What Have We Done?” The Guardian. 24 May 2004. Web.
<http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0524-09.htm>.
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Stray Philosophy: Human-Dog Observations on Language, Freedom and Politics
Eva Meijer*
Abstract: The paper draws on the author’s personal experiences with stray dog Olli to explore
philosophical concepts around three themes: language, freedom, and politics. The paper focuses
on the first three months with Olli, in which a common language and habits were created and a
certain level of freedom for Olli was established. The first section shows how this language and
these habits came into existence and argues this created a common world as well as a way to
express that world, which changed both dog and human. The second section discusses learning to
walk on the leash in relation to freedom and oppression in interspecies communities. The last
section focuses on Olli’s political agency as a former stray dog, both on the micro- and macro
level. By emphasizing Olli’s perspective and actions, the paper also aims to explore ways to
move beyond anthropocentrism in philosophy.
Keywords: animal languages, human-animal intersubjectivity, political animal agency, political
animal voice, animal freedom
Introduction
In the early evening of November 17, 2013, Olli arrived at Schiphol Airport. By that time
he had been travelling for over twenty-four hours. He had left Pascani in the North of Romania
on Saturday afternoon, arrived in Bucharest early Sunday morning, waited at the airport for
several hours and then flew to the Netherlands, where I was waiting for him. I was not the only
nervous person at Arrivals. Olli was one of ten dogs who travelled to The Netherlands that
evening, accompanied by two volunteers of a small Dutch animal welfare organization,
“Dierenhulp Orfa”.1 My aunt had offered to drive us home and she chatted cheerfully to the other
waiting humans while I was watching the door.
Eva Meijer is a PhD student in philosophy at the University of Amsterdam and currently at work on her project
entitled Political Animal Voices. The aim of this project is to develop a theory of political animal voice. Building on
insights from political philosophy, phenomenology, poststructuralist analyses of power and language, and various
fields of animal studies (such as ethology, animal geography, and human-animal studies), the project develops and
integrates accounts of political animal agency, animal languages, and animal voices in relation to existing and new
political institutions. Eva also works as a novelist, visual artist, and musician. Contact information:
E.R.Meijer@uva.nl; www.evameijer.nl
*
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The first dogs who arrived were young and very good-looking, with long hair and fluffy
ears. Olli was the last dog to come out of the door and I recognized his black and white fur
immediately. Before I saw him, I had already heard him wagging his tail to the sides of his crate
loudly. The volunteers put the crate down in front of me and I sat down on the floor to speak to
Olli. He was panting because he was nervous, his eyes were red and he smelled really bad, but
above all he was extremely enthusiastic about all this human attention. He was also quite a bit
larger than I expected. One of the volunteers opened the door of his crate and put a collar and a
harness on him. She gave me two leashes and Olli stepped out of the crate. Overwhelmed by
lights and people, he lay down on the floor instantly. I sat down next to him and told him how
happy I was that he was here. He stood up, greeted some of the other dogs, then lay down again,
still wagging his tail.
When most of the other dogs had left, I told Olli we were going home. He refused to get
up. My aunt’s car was parked in front of the airport and we needed to cross the main hall to get
there. I tried to seduce Olli with food, but he was far too nervous to eat. So I picked him up,
waved to the humans and off we went. Olli was not only quite a bit larger than expected, he was
also rather heavy; I had to put him down a few times, where he again made himself as flat and
small as possible (all the time still wagging his tail as if his life depended on it). It took us about
fifteen minutes to get to the car. By the time we got there, we had already both decided to trust
the other, because we needed to.
This paper is a philosophical exploration of the experiences Olli and I had in the first
three months we spent together. In this time period, we created the beginnings of a common
language, we developed habits and we established a certain degree of freedom for Olli, who
learned to deal with living in a city. Both of us put a lot of effort into this; although I am the one
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who writes down what happened, Olli’s voice is as important as mine. The paper is divided in
three sections: language and habits, freedom and walking on the leash, and politics. I could have
also written about other things (love, belonging, play, fear) but these were the topics we
discussed most explicitly. I end with some remarks about Olli’s influence on me, and about how
these experiences can shed light on new forms of living together.
Olli at the Airport (Photos by Eva Meijer)
1. Language and habits
Olli joined a small multispecies household, existing of one human, an eleven-year-old
former stray dog from Greece, Pika, and an eight-year-old cat from Lebanon, Putih. In the five
years of his life Olli had never lived in a house, walked on the leash, or had a close relationship
with a human. He spent his first two or three years as a stray dog, until he was caught by dog
catchers who brought him to the new municipal shelter. In this shelter the dogs were treated
badly; within the first year of the shelter’s existence, over a third of the dogs died, of
malnutrition and fights.2 After about a year Olli was rescued by an animal welfare organization
and brought to a private shelter, where circumstances were slightly better. Although there is no
information available about his parents, Olli is probably a child of generations of stray dogs; in
behavior and looks, he is quite different from the domesticated dogs that live here. He is very fit
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and strong. He can run for hours, jump on a 1.8m high wall without a run-up, and he uses his
paws and mouth to open doors, as well as boxes and plastic bags that contain food.
Olli was neutered in the week before he came and the vet did not perform the operation
correctly; the wound was large and infected. In addition to being very tired, he was ill and he had
to deal with hormonal changes. In his first days here, he slept much in the daytime, and at nights
he was alert. I kept the radio on to filter out sounds but we still woke up every few hours. After a
couple of days he understood the house was a safe place and he has slept well since.
The biggest challenge in the first days was going outside and walking on the leash. He
was scared of walking out of the door (he still does not like doors), of traffic and of walking on
the leash. Dog treats helped, but he often lay down on the street and refused to walk further. He
mostly did this when too much happened at the same time: for example, when we crossed the
street and traffic came from all sides, or when bicycles and humans and other dogs passed us by
as we walked on the sidewalk, or when there were loud noises in different places. Usually he
plucked up his courage after a while, sometimes I had to carry him home (or to the other side of
the road).
Inside the house we also encountered problems. Olli did like human attention, but close
contact with me was difficult for him. It made him nervous to have me near him all the time and
he and I did not understand each other well. In his first weeks here, Pika was Olli’s main guide.
She accepted him immediately and from the first moment they got along well. Both inside and
outside the house, he stayed close to her. If we crossed the street he often walked so close to her
that the sides of their bodies touched. Inside the house, he copied her actions, such as when
trying out new food; if Pika ate a piece of food that was new to him, he also ate it.3 He needed a
lot of physical contact, and Pika did not mind if he lied very close to her; she always remained
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calm when he was nervous. I followed her example; his nervousness sometimes made me
nervous or worried about the future and Pika helped both of us to calm down.4 In The
Netherlands, there are fireworks in the week around New Year’s Eve. Because he had been shot
at in the shelter, by a group of hunters, just weeks before he came here, the loud noises
frightened Olli so much he did not dare to go outside at all anymore. I was afraid we wouldn’t
make it, afraid Olli would not get used to life here. Pika helped him regain his confidence, and
she helped me deal with Olli’s panic.
1.1 Words and bodies
From the first moment, Olli and I tried to understand each other. We both had some idea
of the other: Olli had met many humans, good and bad, and I had experience with dogs and other
animals. Barbara Smuts writes about her experiences after adopting dog Safi from a shelter, who
had “an inherent sense of appropriate behavior.” This was not the case with Olli. His behavior
was aimed at surviving: he was all the time looking to escape, steal food and please humans so
that they would give him food. He for instance jumped on the counter to eat the cat food (Olli is
not a small dog) and on the table to eat my food; he jumped over the fence in my neighbor’s
garden to escape and he chased Putih around the house.
Many of the movements I made frightened him and it seemed as if he could not predict
my movements –in walking past the other in the house, usually both creatures adjust so that they
can pass each other without bumping into each other. Olli clearly lacked the experience to
navigate this type of space and he could not read human bodies well. Although he was eager to
respond in the right manner, he often did not understand my questions and I did not know how to
frame them in a way he could understand. We both did try hard to convince the other we meant
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well. I spoke to him with a friendly voice and touched his body in ways he appreciated; he
wagged his tail all the time and kept offering me his paw. I held his paw a lot.5
We started with the word “no,” mostly for intuitive reasons. I needed to make clear that
Olli could not chase or bite Putih, jump on the counter or over the fence. The word “no” never
gained the meaning “stop this.” It does tell Olli that I would like him to stop doing what he does;
it gives him information about my position, which clarifies situations for him. If I need him to
stop doing something immediately, I need to offer him an alternative, a toy or something to eat,
or I can give him a hug.
Olli is an exceptionally fast learner, and within a few days we developed a simple
language, including the use of words as: no, here, dog bed, food, cookies, yes, go, wait and sorry.
These words were tools we worked with to get to know each other, and they helped me show
Olli the way. In addition to using simple words as tools, I spoke to him in full sentences, as I do
to Pika, and he soon started to understand these as well. He also understands words can have
different meanings in different situations. As our vocabulary grew, Olli’s confidence grew. He is
especially fond of words that describe his behavior in a positive way, such as “good” and
“sweet.”
The most important word was of course “Olli.” Olli very much enjoys having a name. He
likes it when neighbors in the park call him by his name, he likes it when I do so. It makes him
feel appreciated, which is part of belonging here. Humans use it to show they see him and
appreciate him being here. It is also an important instrument between us: I can ask for his
attention and he can choose to respond; because he likes to respond to his name I could let him
off the leash later.
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In addition to words, Olli had to learn to read my gestures and bodily movements. He
expressed a strong desire to have physical contact, but in the first weeks he could not relax when
he was close to me, which resulted in him standing next to me as I sat on the couch, his body
stiff and uneasy. We spent a lot of time on the couch together. Olli showed me how he liked to
be touched and by responding to him I could show him that I meant well. After standing next to
me he sat down, then after a week or so he lay down next to me. If I made a wrong move, he
jumped up. Paradoxically, touching him also helped him relax, especially softly stroking his
neck. He now lies on his back all the time and forces me to rub his tummy, and if I don’t respond
fast enough he growls or barks.
Moving together helped us to get to know each other and gain trust. Because Olli was
nervous and wanted to run, I took him with me as I went running. This helped him to get used to
the city and to my body. In the beginning, he walked from left to right in front of me, so I often
had to stop, jump to the side or over him. We did not run long distances; we ran for a few
minutes, stood still because Olli picked up a scent or was afraid, and then moved again. I
followed what made him most comfortable. Running was more comfortable for him than
walking; if we walked he had too much time to get nervous and see things around him. It also
made him tired, which helped him relax inside the house.
I had to learn to read Olli as well. Some actions were quite clear from the beginning: if he
wants me to pet him, he takes my hand in his hands. But I did not automatically understand what
he meant when he growled (this usually means he is bored but it sometimes meant my head is
too close to his) or barks (this can be an invitation to play or a strong expression of the desire to
go outside). Wagging his tail was a way to communicate he meant well, more than expressing
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joy (as it is often perceived). He now wags his tail much less than in these first months, although
he is happier now.
After a few weeks, Olli started to make eye contact with me in our house; after a few
months he started to do so outside.6 His posture changed. He first held his tail and ears low, in
the house and outside, and I thought this was the default position of his body. But after over two
months, his tail went up in a curl and he walks around proudly now. He was afraid of humans
and masked his fear by acting very friendly: wagging his tail, holding his body and ears low. He
now approaches humans differently and feels confident enough to ignore them in the park. His
attitude towards me changed as well; he stopped asking for attention and comfort all the time. He
does make small gestures, such as touching the inside of my hand with his nose, to make contact
during the day.
A New Dog (for contrast see http://www.dierenhulporfa.nl; Photos by Eva Meijer)
Misunderstandings helped to create understanding (see also Pepperberg 1991, Despret
2006). I once accidently kicked Olli in his face with my foot because he tried to eat something
from the street on our first walk of the day; I was still sleepy and responded too slowly when he
walked in front of me. This scared him, but I immediately told him I was sorry and comforted
him. In the beginning he was also afraid of me dropping plates and pans, but he learned that this
was not directed to him and that I am a clumsy human who means well.
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Although Pika and Olli got along immediately, he had some trouble communicating with
other dogs. This was partly caused by walking on the leash, which made him uncomfortable and
therefore defensive. He was not used to meeting so many new dogs all the time, many of whom
had to be ignored or who did not act in accordance with their position in the hierarchy. When he
was used to walking on the leash, and could play off leash in the park, there were still
miscommunications. Olli uses his voice a lot as he plays (he growls loudly), and he likes to play
rough, something that scares the smaller and shyer dogs. We usually go to a park where there are
more rescue dogs, and Olli gets along with them fine. He is learning to play with the shyer dogs
and they learn they do not have to be afraid of him. Some of them even invite him to play on
their terms and he follows. There is, for example, one young female dog who likes to play slowly
with a lot of touching. She was afraid of Olli’s rough manners at first, but when she got to know
him better, she started inviting him to play in the way she likes. Olli understands this and is more
careful with her than with the others.
First Day (Photo by Eva Meijer)
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1.2 New languages
Language is not something extra or outside of this common world. Heidegger argues
discourse7 is constitutive for Dasein’s existence. For Heidegger, “being-attuned” to others (172)
is a fundamental characteristic of the structure of being in the world. This being-attuned is made
explicit in discourse, of which hearing (listening8) and keeping silent are an important part.
Discourse communicates, and this constitutes the articulation of Being with one another. The
relation between language and world is for Heidegger twofold; language shapes our way of being
in the world and we shape language. In discourse, humans and other animals bring forward their
memories and histories and relate those to new experiences. Discourse is the “articulation of
intelligibility” that underlies interpretation and is what creates meaning.
Iveson (2010, 2012) argues language in this sense also plays a role in the lives of
nonhuman animals. For Heidegger, Dasein is constituted within “infinitely entangled structures
of meaning” that Dasein can only see when it is thrown out of it in a state of Angst or boredom.
In boredom and Angst, Dasein moves from concealment to an authentic existential experience.
According to Heidegger, the animal cannot experience this because she lacks language. But,
Iveson shows, nonhuman animals are also thrown into a world that exists of meaning-giving
structures. They are constituted by and constitute these structures, and language is primordial
with this.
“Language” is here understood not as one true language (see also Glendinning 1998) in
which words have one objective meaning, but rather as a collection of constructed, artificial
languages. In The Beast and the Sovereign, Derrida (2011, 8) asks what beasts and men have in
common. He gives three answers, which he admits are possibly incompatible. Beasts and man
inhibit the same objective world, but they do not inhibit the same world, since the world of men
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is never completely the same as the world of beasts, and third, in spite of this identity and
difference, individual humans and animals never inhibit the same world – “(t)here is no world,
there are only islands.” He then states: “(T)he community of world is always constructed,
simulated by a set of stabilizing apparatuses, more or less stable, then, and never natural,
language in the broad sense, codes of traces being designed, among all living beings, to construct
a unity of world that is always deconstructible, nowhere and never given in nature (2011, 8-9).”
Through creating a common language, Olli and I created a frame of reference. We
expressed ourselves through language, understood in a broad sense (see Meijer 2013 for my view
of language, following Wittgenstein 1958), and this functioned as a bridge to cross the distance
between us. It created a common world and a way to express understanding of this world. We
did so together; the content was not given beforehand. Both Olli and I brought our histories and
ways of giving meaning; through interacting, we created something new that changed both of us.
As Donna Haraway puts it: “Beings do not pre-exist their relatings” (2006, 6; see also Smuts
2006).
1.3 Habits
Our second tool in creating a common world was repetition. Doing the same thing at the
same time of the day everyday gave us something to hold onto. Understanding the habits of the
house and engaging in daily rituals made Olli feel more secure. It also gave us something to refer
to: after he had learned the routine, we could change it. We always take our long walk in the
morning, but because Olli know this, we can go in the afternoon; I can tell him we take the long
walk later. We have many habits, concerning when and where to sleep, when and where to walk,
when and what to eat. Pika and Olli both exercise agency in this. Before Olli came, Pika and I
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took the long walk in the afternoon. In the first months, Olli had much energy after sleeping
through the night and he expressed a strong interest in walking (by growling and barking), so we
moved the long afternoon walk to the morning. He is much calmer now, but by now we are all
used to walking in the morning, so we keep the routine. Olli prefers to sleep a bit on a chair in
the front room of the house after his breakfast, while Pika and I are in the living room. After the
long walk, Olli chews his bone on the bed while Pika is on the couch; in the evening they are
both on the couch until Pika goes to bed. If Olli gets bored in the morning he comes to the living
room where he greets me before moving to the couch with Pika.
Merleau-Ponty (143; see also Weiss 2006) argues that not consciousness but the body
acts in habitual projects. The body understands what happens and acts unintentionally. Instead of
narrowing our scope of actions, habits expand the meaning and range of our experiences and
widen our access to the world. They offer “a different way of inscribing ourselves in the world
and of inscribing the world in our body” (Weiss 236).9 The body is seen as “an open system of
dynamic exchanges with the world, exchanges that, in their habituality, ground the body ever
more firmly within the world, and, in the process, offer us new ways of engaging and
transforming it” (Weiss 2006:236). Each subject has a unique way of being in the world and
negotiating experiences. Interaction with others adds a new meaning giving structure, which, if
repeated, is added to the repertoire of the body. For both Olli and me, habits structured
experiences, added new layers of meaning to our lives together.
After a few weeks, I taught Olli to walk next to the bicycle. Pika and I usually travel to
our favorite park with a cargo bike because it is too far for her to walk; we have small parks
nearby but we do not like them so much. Olli soon learned to run next to the cargo bike, while
Pika sat in it. This bike is quite heavy, especially with Pika in it, and Olli was still learning to
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walk on the leash and afraid of the city, so going to the park like this was quite a challenge for
Olli and me. Going to the same park every day, walking next to the bicycle and taking the same
route soon became familiar, making life more familiar. Creating habits like these made Olli more
at home in his new life. This particular habit gives us freedom to travel. Through moving with
Olli and learning about his responses, I gained insight in his way of navigating the environment
and his view on his surroundings. I learned to see through his eyes. I can reflect on my responses
and switch between our perspectives, but when we bike to the park and encounter something that
frightens Olli, my response is physical and immediate in the way Merleau-Ponty describes.10 I
act because there is not just me now, there is us.
2. Learning to walk on the leash
2.1 The shape of freedom
In his first weeks, Olli was very eager to escape. One afternoon, he chewed on the leash
when I spoke to a neighbor; it took him less than a minute to break it (luckily he wore a collar
and a harness). Later that week he jumped over a 1.6m fence in the neighbor’s garden. There’s a
high brick wall between my garden and the street so there was no real risk of him running away,
but the message was clear. He was very eager to run away: the city made him nervous and he
wanted to get out of it; he also had a strong desire to scavenge for food. Being with me made him
nervous: he had to watch me all the time to make sure I would not hurt him. After a while he
started to relax inside the house, but outside he was still nervous and did not make much contact
with me, although he did watch Pika. When something frightened him, he did not turn to me for
help or comfort (as Pika does), but he retreated even more in his own world. Walking on the
leash made him extra insecure: he felt handicapped by it. Looking at his behavior, one could say
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Olli understood freedom in a negative sense; he wanted to be free from external restraints. He
felt very passionate about enlarging this freedom.
Olli’s desire to escape was of course connected to past experiences. He had lived in a
cage of about eight square meters, with one or two other dogs, for over a year. Someone came to
feed the dogs once a day, and once or twice a week a volunteer visited the dogs, but most of their
attention went to the dogs that had health problems. In the municipal shelter where he lived
before, he shared one large space with many dogs who were not given enough food. Many dogs
died, and escape was high on their list. Before that, Olli lived on the streets. He was free in the
sense that he could decide where to go, what to eat and who to be with, but there are many
dangers for stray dogs in Romania and he had to be on guard constantly. Olli has clearly had bad
experiences with humans, and fear also restrains freedom.
And finally, Olli has a strong will. Making his own choices, concerning where to go, who
to be with and what to eat, is important to him. I wanted to respect this and treat him as an equal,
but I was tied to the circumstances; I had to make him walk on the leash. Dogs are legally
obliged to walk on a leash, except in certain designated areas (such as parts of beaches and dog
parks), and there is a lot of traffic in this part of the country.
For reasons of safety, in the first weeks I made Olli wear both a collar and harness
outside. He slowly became used to the neighborhood and our routines, which enabled me to take
off the collar. If we did something difficult, such as running next to the bicycle or taking the
tram, I also made him wear his collar as well. After about a month, I felt secure enough to take
him and Pika to our favorite (off-leash, unfenced) park. This park is large, relatively quiet and
visited by friendly dogs. I bought a lunge line so that Olli could play with the other dogs and
behave more naturally. Although he felt more and more at ease, he still really wanted to run and
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did not pay much attention to me outside the house – he came when I offered him food, but he
did not make eye contact and his stress level was quite high. This was the most difficult period in
terms of freedom. Olli was still nervous, yet eager to move and to play with the other dogs. I
wanted to let him off the leash, but could not, because our relationship was too fragile and there
was too much traffic nearby. It was physically difficult for both of us as well: Olli is a strong
dog, and it hurt (his body and my hand) if he ran to the end of the leash and pulled it. It was hard
for him to behave normally towards other dogs; he felt handicapped by the physical restraints.
This made him more defensive and sometimes a bit agitated. Although he did not seem to hold it
against me, I felt sorry for being the one who restrained his freedom. I wanted him to be as
happy as possible – I knew running and playing with other dogs would make him happy – and I
only made things more difficult for him.
In February he started to make eye contact with me in the park. We always go to the park
around the same time, so Olli got to know the dogs and the humans that come there well and they
know him, which makes him feel safe and connected. In that time, he always came to me when I
called him, also when other dogs distracted him. I decided to take the next step and I sometimes
let go off the long leash for a while, then picked it up again. After that, I left a short leash on the
harness, and then I completely took the leash off. This process spiralled in the right direction: I
could start it because he was more at ease, and it made him more at ease because he could use his
body freely. This improved his relationships with the other dogs in the park and helped him
relax, which also changed his attitude towards me.
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Olli and Pika (Photos by Eva Meijer)
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2.2 Discipline and deliberation
Between Olli and me, the leash had multiple meanings. On the one hand, it constrained
Olli’s freedom of movement and expression. On the other hand, it was a tool between us (similar
to words), an instrument for what Driessen calls “interspecies deliberation” and as such is helpful
in his education.
I first want to make a distinction between the process of learning to walk on the leash and
the leash as an institute. As an institute, leashes very clearly restrict the freedom of dogs. The
leash can be seen as an instrument to control the bodies of nonhuman animals, to tame or train
them and make them internalize power: to discipline them (Foucault 2010). Many humans in
Western societies have strict ideas about their dog’s behavior and even use instruments such as
shock collars, in which fear for pain is the main learning mechanism, to control their bodies and
behavior. Would I have had a choice, I would have chosen not to use a leash because it
represents my power over Olli,11 symbolically and literally. It reinforced his fear of humans and
his low self-esteem, and it made it harder for him to behave as he thought best in a situation that
was already difficult. Olli is now used to it, but he does not like to walk on the leash. He does not
make a big deal of it, but if he would have a choice he would choose not to. Unfortunately, we
had and have no choice, for the reasons I already mentioned. I am forced, on legal grounds, to
keep my dogs on the leash and Olli really wanted to escape and there was a risk of him being
hurt or even killed. Both aspects, the legal obligation to keep dogs on the leash and threats to
safety, are expressions of an anthropocentric society.12
Some authors (Haraway 2003, 2006; Hearne 2007) view learning processes (such as
walking on the leash, learning to fetch, practicing for sports) as training. Vicki Hearne describes
how through training (for sports or games), words gain meaning, language-games come into
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being and understanding is made possible. The world of nonhuman animals expands if they are
taught words and commands, which enriches their lives. Haraway (2003) describes something
similar when she discusses her training for agility with dog Cayenne Pepper. She stresses the
mutuality of this process and argues both of them changed during the process. Olli and I both
changed, but our experiences were different from the processes of “training” Haraway and
Hearne describe. We had no common ground to start from and our communication was aimed at
living together on a basic level, not sport or games. Second, for Hearne, the human trains the
animal, sometimes using harsh methods, and this was not the case with Olli and me – I asked
him things and taught him things, and he asked things from me. Both Hearne and Haraway ask
the animal to obey commands the human gives completely. I do not ask this kind of attitude from
Olli and I do not think complete obedience is necessary for a strong connection, or preferable. As
Pika and Putih, Olli is extremely attentive, although he has his own preferences and views.
The process might be better understood as education. In the political theory of animal
rights they put forward in Zoopolis (2011), Donaldson and Kymlicka mention the right to be
educated in multispecies societies, for domesticated animals and humans. I taught Olli things,
Pika taught him many things as well, and he educated himself by paying close attention to his
surroundings (for example, the behavior of other dogs in the park). He was eager to learn; in the
shelter he was one of the dogs who expressed his desire for contact with humans constantly and
clearly. He enjoys learning new skills and displaying them. Learning to walk on the leash was
education, and the leash was a tool in further education; walking on the leash helped him to learn
to take the tram and the train (although trains still frighten him), to ignore dogs when walking on
the leash next to the bicycle, to ignore (to some extent) humans who eat food on the street, and
so on. In this process I sometimes had to keep him from doing what he wanted, but the process
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was not one of unlimited restriction: there were clear goals and because Olli learned very fast,
many of the problems we encountered were temporary.
However, as I mentioned before, the leash also made things more difficult and we did not
need it to come to understanding – Olli would have learned these things also without the leash,
although the tempo in which he learned them might have been different. Still, the communication
we had because of the leash did provide us with extra information. Driessen argues for an
account of animal deliberation in which material interventions can stir dialogue between human
and nonhuman animals. He discusses the situation in which cows learn to use a milk machine.
Confronted with this new machine, cows adapt their views and behavior, and in response to
them, farmers do as well. The relationship with the machine enables the cows to display new
behavior and the farmers to see them differently. The leash can also be regarded in this way.
Because of how Olli responded, I learned about him and vice versa. This is a dynamic process.13
The precise meaning of the leash was not given beforehand. Olli likes going out, and he has
started to associate the leash with nice things such as dog biscuits and going to the park. He often
asks for biscuits as we walk and I often give them to him (sometimes without thinking,
sometimes to reward him). I mostly notice the leash if we have different ideas about where to go.
If this happens, we negotiate. Because we return to it often, we have time to adjust our opinions,
to give the other reasons and think it over. I watch his behavior and adjust mine as much as I can,
he watches me and responds to what I ask.14
The leash did not just function as an instrument of repression.15 As our understanding
grew, Olli started to flourish. His body changed: some muscles in his hind legs disappeared,
others became stronger; his neck was very thick when he came, now it is of normal size. As I
mentioned before, when he arrived, he held his tail and the back of his body low. Photographs of
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him in the shelter show the same posture. After three months, a curl appeared in his tail. His
walk became steady, calm and proud. His attitude towards humans changed as well. In the
beginning, he greeted all humans; after three months he no longer felt he needed to ask everyone
for reassurance and started to ignore humans we met in the streets and in the park.16
On Our Way to the Park (Photo by Eva Meijer)
3. Stray Politics
Dog-human relations can be political in different ways. Both of the topics I discussed
above have a political side to them. “Language” is usually understood as solely human and is in
the philosophical tradition used as a demarcation between human and nonhuman animals (see
Derrida 2008, 2009, 2011 for an analysis of this mechanism). This leads to problems such as
anthropocentrism in laws, discourse and practices. Language and politics are interrelated on
various levels. In political philosophy, speaking is usually considered to be a necessary condition
for being a political actor. How language is defined, and by whom, is a political issue. Calling all
nonhuman animals “animal” has political consequences. In many of these situations, nonhuman
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animals exercise political agency. In this final section I focus on some aspects of Olli’s political
agency. I first discuss Olli’s agency in relation to the public image of Romanian stray dogs. I
then turn to political agency more generally, on the micro and the macro level.
3.1 Being a stray dog from Romania
Following the death of a four-year-old boy, allegedly killed by stray dogs,17 in September
2013 Romania’s top court ruled in favor of killing thousands of stray dogs. A new law made it
possible to euthanize dogs who had been in shelters for fourteen days, or sooner, in cases where
there was not enough food to feed the dogs in the shelters. Euthanasia is often performed with
coolant. Shooting, electrocuting and gassing the dogs are also forms of euthanasia. Sometimes
dogs are left in cages without food and water, to starve. In some towns, capturing and killing a
dog, euphemistically called “dog management” pays 200 euros per dog, while animal welfare
organizations receive 25 euros for capturing and neutering dogs, although neutering dogs is the
only effective way of reducing populations.18 Dogs with the ear tags of animal welfare
organizations, showing they are neutered, are also captured and killed. In addition to the killings
of hundreds of dogs a day by companies that work for the government, dogs are beaten to death
on the streets, poisoned and burned alive19 by angry citizens.
My decision to adopt a stray dog from Romania was influenced by this political situation;
in addition to offering Olli a home, I decided to use my work to create awareness about the
situation. I did so by writing about, drawing and photographing Olli, as well as by writing about
the situation in Romania. The work was published on my website and Olli was mentioned in
interviews.20. While Olli had no say in when it came to moving to the Netherlands, he did
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influence my work, directly through his actions and indirectly because my perspective changed
through our interaction.
Olli exercises agency in more ways. In Romania, he invented a little dance for humans in
order to ask for food, attention and sympathy (I still sometimes see him do this when we meet
strangers, especially with male humans). Through this behavior, he challenged stereotypes about
stray dogs. Iris Young writes about the role of stereotypes in what she calls “cultural
imperialism,” the situation in which the dominant group (in this case, humans) sets the standards
for socially acceptable behavior. She points attention to the fact that the “other" is in the same
movement singled out and rendered invisible. We see this with stray dogs. On the one hand, they
are voiceless, and humans are indifferent towards them: they are part of the city but faceless,
worthless. On the other hand, they are seen as dangerous, dirty and bad. Belonging to the
category “stray dog” renders one invisible as an individual, and because one is invisible, it is
easy to project characteristics on that person. Olli challenged this by being visible in a gentle
way. Over here, the attitude towards dogs is different; humans are generally friendly. But here he
also challenged stereotypes, regarding, for example, the learning abilities of older dogs and more
generally, the subjecthood of animals. Because he is so friendly and open, many strangers we
encounter on the street want to pet him or say something to him. I tell them he is from Romania
and inform them about the situation over there.
3.2 From micro practices to macro agency
Taking other animals seriously as subjects and treating them as equals can challenge
anthropocentrism. Irvine proposes to see play between humans and cats or dogs as a site for
political resistance. She argues that in play, humans and dogs or cats challenge the current
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construction of the human-animal divide. According to Irvine, play acknowledges nonhuman
animals’ subjectivity and communication skills. It thereby challenges “human disregard for nonhuman life” (1) and creates interconnection between members of different species. Irvine
discusses different aspects of play, such as resisting “the notion of otherness” and “trends to
dominate other species.” Drawing on the work of Foucault, she sees micro-practices, common
everyday practices, as spaces in which power hierarchies and conflicts are shown, and in which
common views about human-animal hierarchies are challenged.
Honoring animal agency and subjecthood can indeed function as a basis for new forms of
living together; it is also important to acknowledge that animals already exercise agency in many
ways and thereby influence our understanding of the world around us. However, as the story of
Olli shows, not everything can be fixed on the individual level. A focus on individual
relationships leaves intact the frame in which animals can exercise agency, as we saw with
walking on the leash and having to navigate city traffic. Donaldson and Kymlicka (2012) make a
distinction between micro- and macro agency. Some authors (Haraway 2006, Hearne 2007)
focus solely on animal agency in personal relationships, in which the human ultimately decides
the scope of the animals’ choices. This obscures certain problems and can even legitimate
violence because the larger framework of exploitation of nonhuman animals is not addressed
(see for example Weisberg’s [2006] critique of Haraway). Donaldson and Kymlicka show that it
is often assumed that humans have a wide scope of agency, where the macro frame of
domesticated animals is “fixed by their evolutionary history and/or species nature, predetermining a life of rigid dependence on humans and human society.” Instead, Donaldson and
Kymlicka argue, humans should provide animals with options to expand their macro framework,
such as being able to exit the human-animal community they are part of. In practice, this would
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mean that although domesticated animals have a right to be socialized into human-animal
communities, they also have a right to leave, to go and live in communities with members of
their own species, or spend only part of their time with humans. This would require new spatial
arrangements and a very different attitude towards the preferences of nonhuman animals. Taking
macro-agency into account does not mean that nonhuman animals can do whatever they want
and can be completely free in what they choose. There are always constraints on the scope of
agency, as there are for humans, since some dimensions of life are unalterable, where others are
open to alteration.
Although I am committed to creating as much space for Olli as possible, the scope of his
agency is determined by the limits of a human-centered society. This is unfortunate, because he
has a strong spirit and enlarging the scope of his decision-making would enrich his life. The
situation now is patronizing; Olli is forced to walk on a leash, to follow one human and so on,
while he is an autonomous adult who is very happy with a warm bed, central heating, food at
fixed times and cuddles, but who would also like to spend time outside, roam the streets on his
own, create friendships with individuals of different species, and maybe be part of a larger group
of dogs.
Olli Has a Bird on His Back (Eva Meijer)
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Concluding remarks
Olli has adapted well to his new life. Remarkably well, considering he is a five-year-old
dog who never lived in this type of situation before. When he arrived, he preferred dog company
to human company and would have chosen the former over the latter (although he would seek
out contact with humans, he is especially fond of children). As we get to know each other better
and build a stronger connection, I am not sure about that anymore. He enjoys having a place
where he belongs, and it is important for him to belong to a group. He is much happier than he
was before, much more relaxed and more present.21
Olli was not the only one who changed in the months after he came here. I also
changed.22 The physical process was and is rather intense; we spend much time outside (walking,
running, in rain and wind, through muddy fields), and we have much physical contact, both
outside and inside the house. Pika and I often touch, but mostly in passing, small gestures. We
like to sit next to each other quietly, she sometimes places her head on my lap. Olli needs more
intense interaction. In The parrot who owns me, Joanna Burger writes about the preening rituals
of parrot Tiko: “As he cared for my body, I felt myself transported into a much more physically
attentive kind of life than we’re used to in this society” (107). Although Olli does not preen or
groom me (he sometimes licks my foot), I experience something similar because touch is so
important to him. He often asks me to rub his tummy – by lying next to me on his back and
growling or barking – or just to pet him – by sitting next to me and taking my hand in his paws.
This way of interacting connects me to him; being together is important to him and what he asks
from me in that regard makes me feel more connected to the world around us. The connections I
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have with Pika and Putih are clear and strong; we belong to each other. Olli wants to belong and
connect, but the precise meaning of this is still in question, and still growing.
On a more general level the perspective Olli offered me on our society reminded me of
certain aspects of our society and human-animal relations, things I knew but that I experienced in
a different way. His views on, for example, dog leashes, the amount of dogs in this city, cars,
large machines, humans and houses made me experience these in a different way. Olli has very
clear preferences regarding food, other dogs, when to walk, where to walk, when to cuddle,
where to sleep and so on, and our discussions about these things help shape our life together.
These experiences can function as the starting point for envisioning new ways of interacting and
arranging public spaces.
In animal rights theories, there is a strong tendency to view animal freedom solely as
negative freedom, as freedom from humans (see Donaldson and Kymlicka 2011 for an analysis).
Although some animals of course prefer to have as little contact with humans as possible, Olli
shows it is possible for a stray dog to change, to gain confidence and adapt to – or even embrace
– new circumstances in such a way that freedom is gained. Not just freedom of movement in an
anthropocentric world, also freedom in interaction with others, with the possibility of starting to
love a human being. And he is not the only one affected: contact with animals of other species
enriches my life. Olli and the others teach me not only about animals, they teach me about all
things that really matter.
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Olli’s First Time at the Beach (Photo by Eva Meijer)
Notes
1
http://www.dierenhulporfa.nl
2
http://dierenhulporfa.nl/Pascani.html
3
Later on, I could also play that role for him. I once gave him a piece of cucumber and he
refused to eat it until I took a bite.
4
After Olli arrived, the relationship between Pika and me also changed. We became partners.
My attitude towards her has always been respectful, and I let her make her own decisions when
possible, but now I simply trusted her to do the right thing; for example, in the park, she now
walks off leash and I can’t watch her because I keep my eyes on Olli. I also noticed how very
attuned we are to each other. Pika can read my mind, or, more probably, she can read the
smallest movements of my body. We do not touch as much as Olli and I do, but we often look
into each other’s eyes and there are many small gestures in which we connect throughout the
day. Pika became more active since Olli came, he challenges her to walk more and we spend
more time outside. With him she feels more secure in the evening (her sight is deteriorating and
she was a bit insecure when it was dark outside). They sometimes play together in the park, very
roughly, which shows their mutual trust. I have not seen Pika play with another dog with that
intensity for years.
5
The only thing they taught him in the shelter was to sit and give his paw and in the first weeks
he did this all the time, to show he meant well.
6
He also started to yawn when I yawn and to sigh when I sigh deeply.
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7
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Discourse is expressed in language and is existentially language (1962:162).
8
Olli and I also had to learn to listen to each other in both senses: we had to learn to hear the
other and to follow the other.
9
“To get used to a hat, a car or a stick is to be transplanted into them, or conversely, to
incorporate them into the bulk of our own body.” (Merleau-Ponty 1962: 143).
10
Something similar happened with my horse Joy when I was younger. She was always slightly
nervous in traffic, and I internalized her responses so that when I rode my bicycle, plastic bags
also scared me.
11
Ideally, I would have left all choice of participation in our household with him. It took him
only a few days to start to appreciate having a house, both in terms of safety and food, so I
suspect he would have chosen to live with me (at least over his former situation).
12
Small acts of violence towards dogs are completely accepted in our society: almost every day I
see humans drag dogs along (with collars that almost choke them), yell at them or even hit or
kick them.
13
For Foucault, power is not simply oppression: power produces and is mutual; there is always
the possibility of a reversal of power. This is literally true for the leash as instrument: we are
both on a side exercising pressure, with the leash between us as a topic for discussion. The power
relations between us are not fixed; I often follow him and use no force. The leash can of course
also be a tool for oppression, depending on the human and dog and the training strategies
involved.
14
He does not simply follow and if I would pull the leash, he only pulls on the other side. I need
to convince him (we are going home now).
15
The leash makes some dogs feel more confident. Small dogs often feel confident knowing
their human is on the other side of the leash, something they express by barking loudly to dogs
twice or three times their size.
16
In Olli’s profile on their website, Dierenhulp Orfa described him as a very happy dog. Much of
his “happy” behavior is actually an act to try to get attention and food. When he became more
relaxed, he stopped acting in the ways he previously did. He still wags his tail, but not all the
time; he can lie somewhere without watching me all the time now and I sometimes get to see a
really happy face (for example when I come home with groceries) – like a smile.
17
http://www.savethedogs.eu/romania-il-parlamento-reintroduce-l’eutanasia-come-strumentoper-la-gestione-del-randagismo/lang-pref/en/
18
http://www.vetwork.org.uk/abc.htm
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19
http://www.four-paws.org.uk/projects/stray-animals/romania/overview-of-the-stray-dogssituation-in-romania-2013-/
20
I had just published a new novel on the topic of animal rights, so there was some attention for
my work and persona in newspapers and magazines.
21
He makes Pika happy. He is very sweet, playful and joyful and likes to make jokes. With a
joke I mean an act that is meant to amuse me or to draw my attention to something in a joyful,
playful way. Jokes are similar to games but they refer to something outside of the situation. Pika
and he also make jokes together. They like to roll in the dirt and sniff each other afterwards,
wagging their tail as if they give the other a high five for smelling bad. And they form a team if
they want to put pressure on me to give them food.
22
Although Olli and Pika understood each other well from the beginning, their contact deepens.
In the beginning, Olli lied next to Pika on the couch and the bed. Pika accepted this but was
slightly indifferent. Later on, she also sought out his company. They often greet the other during
the day, kissing and wagging their tails. They also team up to pressure me for food.
References
Burger, Joanna. The Parrot Who Owns Me: The Story of a Relationship. New York:
Random House, 2002. Print.
Derrida, Jacques. The Animal That Therefore I Am. New York: Fordham UP, 2008. Print.
---. The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume I. Chicago: Chicago UP, 2009. Print.
---. The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume II. Chicago: Chicago UP, 2011. Print.
Despret, Vinciane. “The Becoming of Subjectivity in Animal Worlds.” Subjectivity
23 (2008): 123–39. Print.
Donaldson, Sue and Will Kymlicka. Zoopolis: A Political Theory of Animal Rights.
Oxford: Oxford UP, 2011. Print.
---. “Citizen Canine: Agency for Domesticated Animals,” presented at conference on
“Domesticity and Beyond: Living and Working with Animals,” Queen’s University,
September 2012. Conference presentation.
Driessen, Clemens. “Animal Deliberation.” Political Animals and Animal Politics. Eds.
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Marcel Wissenburg and David Schlosberg, forthcoming.
Foucault, Michel. Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison. 1975. London: Penguin,
2010. Print.
Glendinning, Simon. On Being With Others: Heidegger, Derrida, Wittgenstein. New
York: Routledge, 1998. Print.
Haraway, Donna. The Companion Species Manifesto. Chicago: Prickly Paradigm
Press, 2003. Print.
---. When Species Meet. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008. Print.
Hearne, Vicki. Adam’s Task: Calling Animals by Name. 1986. New York: Skyhorse
Publishing, 2007. Print.
Heidegger, Martin. Being and Time. Malden, MA & Oxford: Blackwell Publishing,
1927. Print.
---. “Letter on Humanism” Basic Writings. 1947. San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1993. Print.
Irvine, Leslie. “The Power of Play.” Anthrozoös 14.3 (2001): 151-60.
Iveson, Richard. “Animals in Looking-Glass World: Fables of Überhumanism and
Posthumanism in Heidegger and Nietzsche.” Humanimalia: A Journal of
Human/Animal Interface Studies 1.2 (2010): 46-85. Print.
---. “On the Importance of Heidegger’s Anthropogenesis, and of Moving Beyond It.”
Natural History Museum (London). Unruly Creatures 2: Creative Revolutions
18 June, 2012. Conference presentation.
Meijer, Eva. “Political Communication with Animals.” Humanimalia: A Journal of
Human/Animal Interface Studies 5.1 (2013): 28-52. Print.
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Nature: Course Notes from the Collège de France. Trans.
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Robert Vallier. Evanston IL: Northwestern UP, 2003. Print.
---. Phenomenology of Perception. Trans. Colin Smith. London: Routledge, 1962. Print.
---. The Visible and the Invisible. Trans. A. Lingis. Evanston, IL: Northwestern UP, 1968. Print.
Pepperberg, Irene. “Grey Parrot Intelligence.” Proceedings of the International
Aviculturists Society January (1995): 11–15. Print.
Smuts, Barbara. “Between Species: Science and Subjectivity.” Configurations 14.1-2 (2006):
115-126. Print.
---. “Encounters With Animal Minds.” Journal of Consciousness Studies 8/5–7 (2001):
293–309. Print.
Weiss, Gail. “Can an Old Dog Learn New Tricks? Habitual Horizons in James, Bourdieu, and
Merleau-Ponty.” Intertwinings: Interdisciplinary Encounters with Merleau-Ponty. Ed.
Gail Weiss. Albany: SUNY Press, 2006. 223-240. Print.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig. Philosophical Investigations. Oxford: Blackwell, 1958. Print.
Young, Iris Marion. Justice and the Politics of Difference. Princeton: Princeton
UP, 1990. Print.
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Film Reviews
The Raw, the Cooked, and the Scavenged
Review: Beasts of the Southern Wild (2012), Dir. Ben Zeitlin, Cinereach/Journeyman
Pictures, 93 mins.
Lucinda Cole*
Abstract: This article examines the 2012 film Beasts of the Southern Wild in the light of
intersectional feminism, specifically in terms of how scavenging, a key biological process,
complicates the traditional concerns of environmentalism, critical race studies, feminism, and
food politics. Using bell hooks’ reading of the film as a point of engagement, it advocates for
more attention to scavenging in the conjoined discourses of contemporary ecocriticism and social
justice movements.
Keywords: scavenging, animality, ecofeminism, intersectional feminisms, wetlands, Louisiana,
critical race studies, Claude-Levi Strauss
The 2012 film Beasts of the Southern Wild contains a scene that has generated much
commentary, along with occasional charges of racism. In it Hushpuppy, played by Quvenzhane
Wallis, is at a crab boil with her father and other residents of the Bathtub, a wetlands community
based on the Isle de Jean Charles in Louisiana’s Terrebonne Parish. A man at the table begins to
show Hushpuppy how to eat a crab—by opening the apron with a knife—when her father
interrupts, commanding her to “Beast it.” She does. Rejecting the tool, she grabs the crab with
both hands and tears it apart, using her teeth, rather than her fingers or a fork, to rip out the crab
meat, while growling.
*
Lucinda Cole is the author of Imperfect Creatures: Vermin, Literature, and the Sciences of Life, 1600-1730,
forthcoming from University of Michigan Press. On the Board of Directors of Maine Friends of Animals, Maine’s
largest animal protection organization, she teaches at the University of Southern Maine, specializing in early modern
animal studies, food studies, and environmental studies. Among her recent publications is a special issue of The
Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation which includes “Speciesism, Identity Politics, and Ecocriticism: A
Conversation With Humanists and Posthumanists” (The Eighteenth-Century: Theory and Interpretation 52 [2011],
87-106). Her new book-length project traces scavenging in ethnographic literatures and science. Email:
lucinda@maine.edu
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bell hooks singles out this scene as one of the film’s “most disturbing,” arguing that it
demonstrates the brutality of Wink, her father; he shows affection towards his daughter “as a
reward for her enactment of meaningless violence,” writes hooks, “especially when she mimics
the behavior of a raging patriarchal male” (hooks). Finding it “a major mystery” that
“moviegoers adore the film,” hooks concludes that its “pornographies of violence” are “hidden
behind romantic evocations of mythic union and reunion with nature” (hooks). Her reading of
the film as a conservative Gaiaesque celebration of capital N “Nature” is understandable, given
Hushpuppy’s repeated references to herself as “a little piece of a big, big universe,” even without
Zeitlin’s contention that his heroine “evolves” to understand nature as a “complete” and “flowing
system, something in which everything has its place and everything plays its part” (Berlin).
The question of whether the environmentalism of the film is intrinsically, or accidentally,
at odds with the anti-racist and feminist vision that hooks, among others, would prefer it convey,
is worth considering. In contrast to hooks, I want to start by taking seriously the role of food in
this film because both subjectivity and sustainability are mediated and even made possible
through feeding practices and scenes of consumption. Catching, cooking, eating, feeding—as
animal studies scholars from Carol Adams to Cary Wolfe have claimed—these are all gendered
phenomena through which both gender roles and species distinctions are marked (Adams,
Wolfe).
The “Beast it” episode is one of several feasts or famines that help to structure the film.
Beasts of the Southern Wild opens with Hushpuppy feeding a baby bird, chickens, and pigs,
followed by a crawfish boil, in which her teacher Bathsheeba announces what is in many ways
one of the film’s crucial concerns: “Meat…meat…meat…every animal is made out of meat,
everything’s part of the buffet of the universe.” Through her teacher’s words, Hushpuppy is
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interpellated into a worldview typical of a fragile food web. “Any day now,” says her teacher,
“the fabric of the universe is coming unraveled. The water’s gonna melt. Y’all better learn how
to survive.” “Survival,” according to Hushpuppy’s father, means learning how to pull fish out of
the water with one’s bare hands, rather than using a pole; tearing crab with one’s teeth, and never
losing sight of one’s position as part of a threatened herd. “Strong animals,” says Hushpuppy,
”know when their hearts are weak. That makes them hungry, and they start coming.” If one
adopts Wink’s perspective, the perspective of the film is similar to that of most postEnlightenment maroon narratives, from Robinson Crusoe to Lord Jim: survival requires
violence, and violence is masculine. “Show me them guns!” yells Wink, as they face the
impending storm. When Hushpuppy displays violence, he promotes her a little way up the great
chain of being: “You the man!” Only “babies” and “pussies,” he keeps reminding her, are afraid
of the water.
If we move away from the stories the characters tell about themselves and focus instead
on how the director, Benh Zeitlin, stages the scenes, we see a more nuanced perspective emerge.
Beasts of the Southern Wild operates through an explicit series of contrasts, often conveyed in
striking shots. Very early in the film, for example, before a word is spoken, we see Wink grab a
raw chicken from the cooler and throw it on the grill. Juxtaposed to this scene is Hushpuppy’s
own cooking practices, which require more complex mediations—the pots and pans that she
inherited from her mother. For Levi-Strauss, this contrast between roasting and boiling is a
structuring difference within many cultures, corresponding to “masculine” and “feminine” forms
of food preparation. That Zeitlin’s filmic semiotics evoke Levi-Strauss is worth noting,
particularly given his background. His parents, Steve Zeitlin and Amanda Dargan, are urban
folklorists with advanced degrees in anthropology, founders of the highly respected City Lore
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organization in NYC. Smithsonian Magazine reports that the “exuberant crayfish boils” in the
Beasts of the Southern Wild may be traced back to the feeding rituals known as the Summer and
Winter games in Dargan’s rural South Carolina, home to the pig roasts and chicken chases that
were the subject of Zeitlin’s college entrance essay (Smithsonian). Throughout the film, feeding
practices shape identity, and in case we miss that point Zeitlin introduces us to an eccentric boat
captain who, having eaten a fast-food chicken biscuit every single day, is surrounded by a
mountain of wrappers whose “smell,” he explains, makes him “feel cohesive.” It is probably not
a stretch, then, to conclude that the race and gender politics of a film based on a play “Juicy and
Delicious” and featuring a child named after a fried food will be connected to a food economy,
its food politics interacting with gender, race, and species in complex ways.
The nature of this economy and the ethical problems it presents become most apparent
after the flood. An active agent in this film, water resembles the volcano in Werner Herzog’s La
Soufriere, which Zeitlin said influenced him (Berlin). The post-Katrina Beasts is organized
around a storm and the apocalyptic threat it poses to the freshwater ecosystem of the Bathtub.
The director draws on his knowledge of Louisiana’s wetlands, which face erosion, silting, and
ultimate destruction from many sources: climate change, saltwater intrusion, pollution run-off
from the oil industries, coast damage from wide-scale dredging, growing nutria populations, and
a general loss of animal habitat. The film figures these threats largely through a landscape strewn
with industrial waste and ominous smokestacks in the distance; they are personified, however, by
Hushpuppy’s vision of the oncoming aurochs, released from their icy graves by melting polar ice
caps.
These mythical creatures—actually Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs wrapped in nutria fur
and endowed with prosthetic horns—lead the film into the realm of magical realism, as products
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of the child’s imagination. Their release, journey, hunger, and illness allow Hushpuppy the
opportunity to reflect on her own nature. “Strong animals,” she claims, after discovering her
father’s hospitalization, “know when their hearts are weak. That makes them hungry, and they
start coming.” While clearly the aurochs represent Hushpuppy’s fear of Wink’s impending
death—my “blood,” he tells her, “is eating itself”—her translation of his disease into
generalizations about “strong animals” lends the film an ontological and ethical weight that it
otherwise might not have. After the storm, for example, the remaining residents are confounded
by an influx of saltwater that quickly kills the fish and eventually the mammals they had hoped
to eat until the water receded. Within two weeks, then, the flooded wetlands are filled with the
floating carcasses of goats, chickens, and nutria. At this point, the trudging auroch herd appears
in the Bathtub, some of them falling and being set upon by others, eating their own to stay alive.
“Strong animals got no mercy,” says Hushpuppy. “They’re the type of animals who eat their own
mammas and daddys.” What she’s describing through the aurochs is a scavenging rather than
predatory society; most scavengers do not kill the animals they eat but, in the words of one
research team, “rely on animal deaths due to malnutrition, disease, exposure, parasites, and
accidents” (DeVault, et al. 226). Indeed, before hunting and domesticating live animals for food,
humans competed with them for the carcasses of dead ones (Moleon, et al.).
I want to stay with this image of the scavenging Aurochs for a moment. We tend to think
of Levi-Strauss’ food politics in terms of the “raw” and the “cooked,” but in the text by that
name Levi Strauss makes the sometimes overlooked claim that while differences between the
raw and the cooked structure one axis of presumably universal myths, those between the fresh
and the decayed constitutes another (Levi-Strauss 3). And Beasts of the Southern Wild, set in
Louisiana’s wetlands, derives much of its ethos and energy from images of decay--most notably
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the dead fish and goat carcasses that demonstrate the fragility of a wetlands ecosystem. Precisely
because of this fragility, many wetland animals are scavengers. Blue crabs, for example, are
omnivores and, while roaming the sea or marsh bottom, they eat plants and scavenge from
carrion; if food becomes scarce, moreover, they, like the aurochs, quickly resort to cannibalism.
Indeed, nearly all vertebrate predators are also scavengers to some extent: otters, herons,
woodpeckers, ring-necked pheasants, and hippopotami all occasionally eat carrion (DeVault, et
al. 225). From a scientific perspective, then, both “carrion” and “carrion eater” are highly
unstable categories, intimately related to environmental stresses and conditions of food scarcity.
The boundary between “scavenger” and “predator” is so unstable that even turkey buzzards have
been known to turn predator under periods of environmental stress, when few animal carcasses
are available for consumption.
We might reasonably expect scavenging to be a sensibility congenial to the residents of
the Bathtub, with its marsh trawlers created from pick-up truck beds floating atop empty oil
drums and driven by abandoned lawn mower engines. “We made the movie,” explains Zeitlin,
“as if it were a collage or a junk sculpture. We invited chaos into the process.” This aesthetic, or
politics, of bricolage—working with discarded objects that happen to be available—does not,
tellingly, extend to feeding practices. While a hungry Hushpuppy is willing to eat leaves hanging
from nearby trees, neither she nor her father ever considers plucking drowned creatures from the
water and throwing them on the fire. Their unwillingness to do so points to the existence of
implicit food rules, rules that the characters—if not their critics—seem to recognize and
embrace. On the one hand, Hushpuppy rejects the feeding practices of the dryland, where “they
got fish stuck in plastic wrappers and their babies stuck in carriages.” On the other hand, she
refuses to eat carcasses in what she perceives as a state of decay, even though these animals may
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have been dead no longer than the steaming crabs piled high on the table. The attitude of the film
towards carrion differs little, in one respect, from that of Heart of Darkness, where Marlowe’s
European sensibility is reflected in his nauseated reaction to what he regards as the rotting hippo
meat the Africans brought on ship. Uneaten carrion qualifies Bathsheeba’s earlier
pronouncement that everywhere you turn is “meat,” that “everything’s part of the buffet of the
universe.” Instead, carrion-eating is displaced onto the aurochs who, true scavengers, eat what
they find.
That Hushpuppy both befriends and, in the end, dominates these ancient beasts,
compelling them to bow down before her in a Disneyesque show of supplication, calls into
question hooks’ contention that Beasts of the Southern Wild fails to exhibit an “us-against-them
mentality when it comes to humans and nature.” hooks argues that the people in the Bathtub
share a “complete celebration of their feral animal nature [that] binds everyone in a sacred
contract: they are to resist domestication and civilization at all costs.” But Hushpuppy’s
relationship to the animals around her, real and imaginary, cannot be characterized apart from the
food web that mediates her experience of “nature” and “culture”; her Oddyssean journey ends,
finally, with an awareness of her position at the top of a fragile food chain. “You’re my friend,
kind of,” she says in a sentimentalizing gesture to the aurochs; they back away, as she goes with
her fried catfish to help her father die. Like the women she meets on the riverboat, she counters
his raw with her cooked, his violence with an act of mercy. At this point, she sheds the
hypermasculinization that her father tries to inculcate in her. The formerly androgynous wild
child comes into a “civilized” gendered identity, represented by the dangerous archaic creatures
bowing outside her dying father’s door.
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bell hooks may right that Beasts of the Southern Wild is indeed a relatively conservative
film. Its conservativism, though, exists not only in its replication of strictly gendered beings, but
in its depiction of “meat” as either something one kills or something one buys. In a film whose
characters are so clearly devoted to the question of survival, and whose central character fries up
cat food, the refusal to scavenge food must regarded as a choice. This choice marks the limits of
the “animal” in this film or, more precisely, demarcates a clear species boundary, even if that
boundary is expressed primarily in negative form: humans are the species that will not scavenge.
This assumption is patently false, although scavenging studies have not received the same
attention as those devoted to predation and agriculture. Far from being a “curiosity” of animal
behavior, scavenging, scientists now realize, is a “key ecological process that must be accounted
for” (DeVault, et al. 225). Thwarting any easy division between “culture” and “nature,”
scavenging forces us to look more critically at our understandings of self and other, to confront
more honestly our collective participation in an unsustainable and unethical food web dominated
by the “raw” and the “cooked,” by $200 juicers, macrobiotic diets, organic beef farms, and
endless exposure to food porn. Taking seriously the relationship between taste and waste means
rethinking not only the human and the animal but the axis between the fresh and the decayed,
between meat and carrion, between the edible and the inedible in ways that Beasts of the
Southern Wild raises, but then consigns to an archaic past.
From an ecocritical perspective, we are all in some sense still citizens of the Bathtub,
living in proximity to the trash, leftovers, discards, and the flotsam of culture—some 236 million
tons produced annually in the United States alone—and struggling to determine what is, or
should be, edible. In industrialized countries, wealthy people have moved garbage from the
outskirts of towns, to landfills located in slums, and to towering mountains of trash shipped by
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barge to countries in the developing world. Given the polluting effects of so-called civilization, it
is not surprising that a branch of environmentalism seeks to shift Levi-Strauss’ culinary triangle
so that the people of North America reconsider their largely irrational responses to the “rotten,” a
category no less historically conditioned than any other. Sandor Ellix Katz, of Tennessee’s
Radical Faerie Community, joins other neo-punk food collectives in the world of fermentation,
roadkill, carrion, and found meat (Katz). Freegans in particular advocate a scavenging lifestyle,
largely in the form of dumpster-diving, rescuing and consuming barely expired food products
from trash containers. While freegans are not necessarily vegan or even vegetarian, and may or
may not be self-consciously feminist, their very existence exposes a blind spot in ecofeminism,
which has long lead the way in arguing for an intrinsic relationship among food practices and
broader conceptions of social justice. While ecofeminism might begin to consider the necessary,
shifting, and unstable role of the “rotten” in our foodways, it has—for understandable reasons—
focused almost exclusively on “moral veganism,” critiques of factory farming, anti-predation,
and farm to table cuisine.1 This collective preoccupation with the raw and the cooked is part of a
social agreement by which “culture” is associated with increasing levels of food preparation. As
blogger Sarah Davis writes, “Our social agreements generally dictate that things (food, people,
ideas) that are raw are also incomplete, and things that are rotten must be discarded.” Yet the
triangle with culture and the cooked at its apex might be inverted, or turned on its side. “But
suppose,” Davis asks, “you don’t agree with the elevation of culture to the top of this hierarchy?
Suppose you consider modern society to have a polluting rather than civilizing effect?”
Beasts of the Southern Wild offers a glimpse into this third point on Levi-Strauss’
culinary triangle, but only a glimpse. It is usefully paired with Zai Batmanglij’s 2013 eco-thriller,
The East—also filmed in South Louisiana—that features veganish anarchists of several races
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banded to combat international corporate violence against the land and people. Both films, albeit
in completely different ways, begin from the position of environmental stress, if not nearapocalypse, and explore more or less radical ways of humans challenging the limits of
acculturation, perhaps even going feral. While neither deals directly with the question of animal
rights, both throw us into a liminal moral space and raise hard questions: if being “cultured”
means leaving behind us mountains of bones and rivers of chemicals, stinking signs of
civilization, how can we live? How can we eat in ways that let us sleep? bell hooks rightly
argues that we need feminism. Developing a nose for the rotten, however, may also help us get
out of here alive.
Note
1
Richard Twine identifies several “positions” that have emerged in the literature: a “moral
veganism” associated with Carol Adams and Deane Curtain, among others; Val Plumwood’s
semi-vegetarianism deriving from a critique of factory farming; Clair Jean Kim’s arguments for
an anti-cruelty diet; and Marti Kheel’s “invitation approach” to veganism, which denies that
meat-eating is a compulsory feature of the human diet (205).
References
Adams, Carol. The Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory. Twentieth
Anniversary Ed. New York: Continuum, 2010. Print.
“Beasts of the Southern Wild: The Auroch-Nutria Connection.” 29 June 2012. Web. 17 May
2014. <http://www.righteousfur.com/beasts-southern-wild-auroch-nutriaconnection.html>.
Berlin, Jeremy. “The Story Behind Beasts of the Southern Wild.” National Geographic
NewsWatch. Web. 1 June 2014. <http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/07/17/
the-story-behind-beasts-of-the-southern-wild/>.
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Davis, Sarah. “What can Claude Levi-Strauss teach us about food fads today?” Web. 13 August
2014. <http://www.thesmartset.com/article/article07181301.aspx>.
DeVault, Travis L., Olin E. Rhodes, and John A. Shivak. “Scavenging by vertebrates:
behavioral, ecological, and evolutionary perspectives on an important energy transfer
pathway in terrestrial ecosystems.” USDA National Wildlife Research Center - Staff
Publications. Paper 269. Web. <http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/icwdm_usdanwrc/269>.
hooks, bell. “No Love in the Wild.” Special to NewBlackMan (in Exile). 5 September 2012.
Web. 1 June 2014. <http://newblackman.blogspot.com/2012/09/bell-hooks-no-love-inwild.html>.
Katz, Sandor Ellix. The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved: Inside America’s Underground
Food Movements. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2003. Print.
Levi-Strauss, Claude. The Raw and the Cooked. New York: Harper and Row, 1969. Print.
Lidz, Franz. “How Benh Zeitlin Made Beasts of the Southern Wild.” Smithsonian.com.
December 2012. Web. 23 May 2014. <http://www.smithsonianmag.com/artsculture/how-benh-zeitlin-made-beasts-of-the-southern-wild-135132724/?noist=&story=fullstory&page=3>.
Malone, Robert. “World’s Worst Waste.” Forbes. 6 May 2006. Web. 30 July 2014.
<http://www.forbes.com/2006/05/23/waste-worlds-worst-cx_rm_0524waste.html>.
M. Moleon, J. A. Sanchez-Zapata, A. Margalida, M. Carrete, N. Owen-Smith, J. A. Donazar.
“Humans and Scavengers: The Evolution of Interactions and Ecosystem Services.”
BioScience 64.5 (2014): 394. Print.
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Twine, Richard. “Ecofeminism and Veganism: Revisiting the Question of Universalism” in
Ecofeminism: Feminist Intersections With Other Animals and the Earth. Ed. Carol J.
Adams and Lori Gruen. New York and London: Bloomsbury, 2014. 191-208. Print.
Wolfe, Cary. Animal Rites: American Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist
Theory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. Print.
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Review: Maximum Tolerated Dose (2012), Dir. Karol Orzechowski, Decipher Films, 88
mins.
Justin Kay*
Keywords: Maximum Tolerated Dose, vivisection, animal research, panopticon, Foucault,
biopower, animal bodies, carceral system
Maximum Tolerated Dose is a 2012 documentary by Decipher Films that attempts to
explore the culture of animal-modeled medical research from the perspective of the individuals
most involved: the researchers, technicians, and the animals themselves. With interviews from
medical doctors, former researchers, former research assistants, and undercover investigators,
Maximum Tolerated Dose focuses its attention on the experiences inside the cell, the
construction of space inside the labs, and the relations of power that derive from the production
of knowledge from the animal body.
Unlike most attempts to deal with particular industries or institutions that use animal
bodies, Orzechowski’s film does not indulge itself in the very real gore of animal suffering. Nor
does the film lose itself in questionably founded diatribes on scientific methodologies or the
anthropocentric critique of animal-based medical research. Instead, it focuses on the evolving
phenomenon of animal-based medical research as a relation of power that produces trauma as
reality and relates the invoked subjectivity of those involved. The thematic focuses are those
subjective experiences, those stories and existential and moral crises, which culminate into
intolerance: intolerance of chemical dosages, intolerance of working conditions, intolerance of
captivity, intolerance of complicity, but most importantly, the intolerance of the power relations
*
Justin Kay is a botany research assistant at Portland State University, cofounder of Resistance Ecology, and can be
contacted at justin@resistanceecology.org
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that manifest in the lives of the animals and those that encounter them in the Panopticon of the
laboratory.
In his directorial debut, Karol Orzechowski weaves a story of a contentious phenomenon
that is conventionally depicted as a dialectic between the pious community of science, research,
and so-called progress and the ill-informed, impulsive, and haphazard community of animal
rights. Navigating between these two extremes, Orzechowski attempts to shed light on the real
and traumatic experiences that persist behind closed doors and that transcend the banalities of the
“animal testing drama”:
the debate about vivisection in the mainstream media is essentially ossified into
two caricatured positions: on the one side, you have evil scientists who hate
animals and will perform cruel experiments on them at their whim; on the other
side, you have naive bleeding heart protestors who don’t understand science and
want everyone with diabetes to stop taking insulin and die. But those aren’t the
only people concerned about the issue, and hey, what about the animals as well?
(quoted in Powell)
The film introduces these narratives from the beginning. The discourse begins with an
almost forlorn recounting of experiences that brought our storytellers to the lab. Rachel Weiss, a
former lab technician at Yerkes Primate Research Center, tells us that she sought work in animal
labs as refuge from working in restaurants while in college. Dr. John Pippin relates his naivety as
a young research doctor whose decision to enter into animal research was dictated by his seizing
of a 5-year grant from the American Heart Association. Dr. Ned Buyukmichi stresses that his
involvement in animal research was led by his sincere belief that “this was an appropriate way to
resolve biological questions." In contrast to the characterization of those involved in research as
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malign, insidious, or concerned only with career propagation and grant funding, these
introductory narratives allow us to shed these biased misconceptions from the start.
Orzechowski allows the viewer to move beyond the archetypal and dichotomous
framework of the animal research question that pits science against morality, rationality against
sentimentality, the researcher against the animal advocate, society against the individual, or
“good” against “evil.” It opens us to empathize and sympathize with the too-often forgotten
components of the complex of medical research that are the most traumatized and subjectified:
the workers themselves, whether the primary researcher or the lab technician, and the animals in
use. Foucault (“The Subject and Power”) defines such a subject in two ways: “subject to
someone else by control and dependence, and tied to his own identity by a conscience or
knowledge. Both meanings suggest a form of power that subjugates and makes subject to” (331).
The focus of the film, the stories of the animals, the former researchers, and former
assistants, deals with these “subjects.” Throughout, the cast shares their common thread of naive
idealism, growing cognitive dissonance, and alienation. A former technician, “Isabelle,” tells us
“animal death doesn’t do anything to me. I thought it was better that the animals die than stay
there. I told myself that would be freedom for them.” Dr. Buyukmichi, a member of the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) at his institution, felt isolated from the
rest of his cohorts because he was alone in advocating for minimal animal care. Eric Thomas
Bachli, another former research assistant, used phrases such as “for the greater good” and
“necessary” in an attempt to cope with his encroaching feelings of alienation and guilt. He asks,
“How do you deal?” Dr. Pippin succinctly characterizes the problems that these workers face:
“when you compartmentalize it you can keep cognitive dissonance at arm’s length.” But
eventually, as he narrates, it becomes a losing battle.
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The stories of the animals further reveal a realm of alienation and subjectification. Rachel
Weiss repeatedly references a chimp named “Jerome” whom she worked with and cared for at
Yerkes. She did not want to remember Jerome, though, and she took no photos of him, because
his story was too much for her to bear. Jerome was one of the first chimps to develop AIDS as a
consequence of being injected with HIV. She asks, “Have you seen a chimp cry?” Jerome
deteriorated towards his death. Along the way, he began to lose visitors and caretakers because
he was too intense of a sight to handle, except for Rachel. As Rachel describes it, Jerome’s
became a story of “data and deadlines.”
Gloria Glow of Fauna Sanctuary is brought into the film to tell the story of “Darla,” a 17year old, highly traumatized macaque. She has two sets of tattoos, indicating she was used in at
least two separate institutions. The only paper work that Gloria was able to obtain regarding her
past suggests that she was used in separate studies regarding menstruation and anorexia. Upon
her transfer to the sanctuary she lost the only primate relationships she had and her mental state
made it difficult for her to integrate into the population.
The film uniquely moves beyond the walls of the laboratory and into the jungles of
Cambodia surrounding the ancient city of Angkor Wat. There, wild primates can be seen in the
trees surrounding the city, as what can only be assumed to be poachers approach. The poachers
then capture the primates and stuff them into bags as they begin their long journey in the illicit
primate trade. The footage here is possibly the most intense in the entire film, as the viewer
watches the swift and discrete transition of a life of freedom to a life of captivity and
imprisonment. The viewer then follows the captured primates to a holding facility in rural Lao
PDR before they are to be distributed among the various markets that demand them. These are
the first moments of structural and spatial separation and deprivation along a lifetime of animal
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research. By taking us to this initial point of individualization and subjectification, Orzechowski
can emphasize the power relations of animal research that are more than “evil” scientists or
tortured animals.
In a contrast to the somber tales of lab animals who either were killed or had their spirits
killed, Orzechowski takes us on a trip to Spain to follow the work of Igualdad Animal. He takes
the viewer into a beagle rescue that occurred in 2011. What follows is footage of beagles that
have found reprieve from the “deprivation” of the cage. An activist from Igualdad Animal relates
the story of one beagle in particular whom he described as a former “inmate.” The theme repeats
itself as he characterizes her state at the time of the rescue as a state of “deprivation,” an
incomplete, traumatized being. After rehabilitation with the activists, she is now “complete” in
his words.
The cast’s personal narratives and the accounts of the animals’ lives can be considered
instances of power struggles. The roles of these central players are constructed by the very power
relations that define them. Dr. Lynda Birke, author of The Sacrifice: How Scientific Experiments
Transform Animals and People, narrates much of the film. She describes the common elements
of animal research as it has evolved over the last century as increasing standardization,
simplification, decreasing diversity, and separation. These elements are the very same that
characterize the disciplinary society. The standardization of space within labs, the
standardization of species, and the standardization of breeds alludes to a certain Panopticism that
induces in the animal “a state of conscious and permanent visibility that assures the automatic
functioning of power” (Foucault, Discipline and Punish 201). In the lab, the construction and
standardization of space subjects the workers and the animals to their roles, “born mechanically
from a fictitious relation” (202). In reference to the Panopticon, but applicable here as well,
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Foucault describes as one of the only necessities for the proper functioning of power to be the
proper arrangement and separation of space. In the film, Birke makes a reference to the
“analytic” and the “naturalistic” animal, so characterized by sociologist Michael Lynch. Lynch
asserts that the construction of space, of species, and the whole phenomenology of the laboratory
and medicine are the processes that transform the “naturalistic” animal into the “analytic”
animal. Birke elaborates on this notion, “[c]onstructing lab animals – both literally and
discursively as fundamentally necessary to the pursuit of medical knowledge – is an important
facet of disciplinary power, part of wider systems of medical/scientific surveillance” (170). It is
both the lab animals and the people who must work with them that become individualized in this
subjugated way. Orzechowski illuminates this with woven narratives of control, alienation,
regret, cognitive dissonance, helplessness, and suffering.
Perhaps the most notable shortcoming of the film is its tendency to only trace a rough
sketch of the sweeping relationships of power that characterize the entire medical industry. The
film’s visuals reveal to the viewer all of the elements of an industrial complex. Throughout the
film, the imagery shifts from models wearing cosmetic products, to pharmaceuticals, to incoming
shipping freights (perhaps of live animals, cosmetics, or medicine), to the jungles of Southeast
Asia, to the graduation of what can be assumed to be medical students. The film navigates the
scenes of consumption, production, exploitation, and captivity as allusions to structural and
systematic embeddedness of animal research. Yet this analysis appears a vestige as the array of
images ends. These modalities of power that constitute a whole complex of relationships—
global, economic, social, ecological—are only hinted at in the film. There lacks a total and
explicit synthesis of the themes and concepts strewn throughout. As the film closes on the
concept of “letting go,” the viewer is told, “something needs to change,” but is left with only
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frayed ends of a systematic problem. Without a concrete look at the underpinning structures and
functions of the phenomena, beyond the stories, it is difficult to walk away with a sense of
purpose; we finish with only a taste of the problem. But perhaps because of limitations and the
film’s scope Orzechowski cannot delve deeper.
Overall, there are certain aspects that leave the viewer wanting more. One example would
be the role of governments and academia in constructing the “necessity” of animal research.
Industry-front groups, lobbying, legislation, grant-funding and writing, and job security all
reinforce the phenomenon of animal research (Greek & Greek). Another example would be the
dynamics of the illicit wildlife trade in Southeast Asia. What drives the poachers to become
subjected to the medical-industrial complex? A study by TRAFFIC, a wildlife trade watchgroup, indicates that most poachers in Southeast Asia are in poverty and are driven to the trade
out of rural desperation in a rapidly modernizing global economy. These dynamics are also toooften left out of the discourse surrounding animal research and its global reach. These
marginalized voices deserve a platform to reach a Western audience in order to construct a more
full understanding of the medical-industrial complex. Because of the film’s thematic focus, these
perspectives serve only a transitory function. Perhaps it opens doors for Orzechowski’s future
work.
Considered in its entirety, Maximum Tolerated Dose is a film about sacrifice. It is a film
that examines a certain set of circumstances and conditions under which animals become
incorporated into society. It is a film that examines the factors involved in becoming involved in
medicine and science. These are sacrifices, dosages that must be tolerated in the power relations
of the bio-political strategy:
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I don’t think that we should consider the “modern state” as an entity that
developed above individuals, ignoring what they are and even their very
existence, but, on the contrary, as a very sophisticated structure in which
individuals can be integrated, under one condition: that this individuality would
be shaped in a new form, and submitted to a set of very specific patterns.
(Foucault, “The Subject and Power” 334)
Animal-based research is spun as a tale that leads to salvation, salvation from suffering, from
disease, or even from death. These are the stories that the cast chronicles repeatedly throughout
the film. “Necessary,” “For the greater good,” “Necessary evil,” “Progress”; these are the
facades that the researchers, assistances, and technicians construct above an undertow of growing
intolerance. In the end, they all reach their tolerance, and so do we.
In spite of its analytical limitations, Maximum Tolerate Dose stands as one of the most
novel and complete documentaries in the field of critical animal studies. Taking the viewer
beyond the hype of the animal research drama, Orzechowski focuses his attention on the
subjectified and individualized interplay between the animal and the researcher. By doing so, the
totality of power relations intrinsic to medicine specifically and our socio-ecological order
broadly can begin to be outlined. The intense and stunning visuals sewn throughout reinforce this
dynamic. Balancing words with visuals, narratives with factual information, and emotion with
reason, Karol Orzechowski brings us a film that escalates our intolerance as well. In a sense, we
are left wanting in the best way possible, wanting understanding and wanting resolution.
In this central and centralized humanity, the effect and instrument of complex power
relations, bodies and forces subjected by multiple mechanisms of “incarceration,”
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objects for discourse that are in themselves elements for this strategy, we must hear the
distant roar of battle. (Foucault Discipline and Punish)
References
Birke, Lynda. “Animal Bodies in the Production of Scientific Knowledge: Modelling
Medicine” Body & Society 18.3-4 (2012): 156–178. Print.
Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. New York: Vintage
Books, 1977. Print.
---. Security, Territory, Population. New York: Picador, 2004. Print.
---. “The Subject and Power” Michel Foucault: Power. Eds. J.D. Faubion and P. Rabinow. New
York: The New Press, 1994. Print.
Greek, C. Ray, and Jean Swingle Greek. Sacred Cows and Golden Geese: The Human
Costs of Experiments on Animals. New York: Continuum, 2002. Print.
Lynch, Michael. E. “Sacrifice and the Transformation of the Animal Body into a Scientific
Object: Laboratory Culture and Ritual Practice in the Neurosciences.” Social
Studies of Science 18.2 (1988): 265-289. Print.
Powell, Dylan. “Interview with Karol Orzechowski (Maximum Tolerated Dose).” 2011
Web. 26 June 2013. <http://theveganpolice.com/main/?p=1273>
TRAFFIC. “What’s Driving the Wildlife Trade? A Review of Expert Opinion on Economic and
Social Drivers of the Wildlife Trade and Trade Control Efforts in Cambodia, Indonesia,
Lao PDR and Vietnam”. East Asia and Pacific Region Sustainable Development
Discussion Papers. East Asia and Pacific Region Sustainable Development Department,
World Bank, Washington, DC. (2008). Print.
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Book Reviews
Review: Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication
(2013), Ed. Emily Plec, Routledge.
Alex C. Parrish*
Keywords: animal rhetoric, human-animal communication, adaptive rhetoric, animal signaling
As critical animal studies in general, and animal rhetorics in particular, continue to
develop as thriving interdisciplinary fields of study, scholars will more frequently make explicit
connections between the persuasive strategies of human and nonhuman animals. Emily Plec’s
collection of essays on human-animal communication presents a variety of views on the
borderlands where species meet and interact, and how humans communicate on behalf of
animals, about animals, and sometimes with animals. These interactions present a rich tapestry of
persuasive efforts – some performed by agents, others by mediators for those perceived as
voiceless in the mainstream of human communications theory.
The collection is organized thematically, in three parts: complicity, implication, and
coherence. The section on complicity offers readings of various texts, or moments of human and
nonhuman animal interaction, that facilitate the critique of a human/animal duality and the
consequent subordination of the animal within that relationship. The section on implication
attempts to overcome the hierarchical nature of this relationship by presenting essays that stress
the interrelatedness of human and nonhuman animals. Finally, the section on coherence features
essays seeking to place human communication alongside, rather than above, the communication
strategies of other animals.
* Alex C. Parrish is Assistant Professor of Writing, Rhetoric, and Technical Communication at James Madison
University. Contact: parrisac@jmu.edu
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The trajectory of this collection makes for a successful transit between outmoded views
of animals as lesser beasts on the Great Chain of Being, and the more current ideas shared by
most ethologists (if not communication scholars and rhetoricians) who hold that differences
between humans and other animals are a matter of degree, not a matter of kind, and that the study
of those differences is not always as fruitful as the study of similarities between species. In fact,
the most damning criticism of this collection is that the editor was too modest in reaping the
success of her volume – she could have extended her argument for continuity in a less restrained
manner. Indeed, it would not be difficult to take the trajectory of this collection one step further
and place human communicative efforts within the framework of animal signaling theory. This
would help us to acknowledge the important idea that our persuasive efforts are merely one type
among many forms of animal rhetoric that are all worthy of our attention (Parrish).
This is, perhaps, the logical conclusion of a research program inspired by such varied
figures as the semiotician/philosopher Charles S. Peirce, the rhetorician George Kennedy, and
the zoosemiotician Thomas Sebeok. By defining “internatural communication” as a sharing of
information or an attempt at manipulation that transcends species borders, Plec makes a parallel
between the potential benefits of cross-species study with the already well-known benefits of
cross-cultural study in the field of communication (4). Scholars would do well to pay attention to
the important anthropological and zoological data germane to communication scholarship, which
will allow us to overcome common assumptions about the superiority – or even the exclusivity –
of human intentional communication.
Despite some previous criticism regarding perceived hierarchies of complexity in
Kennedy’s Comparative Rhetoric, Plec adopts Kennedy’s conception of rhetoric as a pre-verbal
energy, but rightly insists on calling her central concept of internatural communication an
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“exchange of intentional energy between humans and other animals” (6). While the current
debate about animal intentionality is one that is fraught with assumptions on both sides, evidence
is mounting that indicates some level of intent motivates the complex behaviors of at least the
most intelligent primates, cetaceans, and birds. Significant study of these arguments has in the
last few decades helped to shape the thriving field of cognitive ethology (Griffin).
While the idea of animal intent is controversial to some, another approach to
understanding animal communication is gaining some traction across disciplines. That is a
sensory approach, which Plec claims will help to “expand our understanding of internatural
communication by rethinking our anthropocentric grip on the symbolic and becoming students of
corporeal rhetorics of scent, sound, sight, touch, proximity, position and so much more” (7).
Such scholarship, being performed by a small group of individuals, is building a bridge from the
better-established fields of embodied rhetorics (which take as a starting point the idea that
persuasive behaviors are inspired and constrained by the body producing them) or material
rhetorics (which are generally concerned with the physicality or material nature of what is
rhetorical) to the nascent field of adaptive rhetoric (which takes a biocultural approach to
rhetorical theory, allowing for not only cross-cultural, but also cross-species approaches to
understanding persuasive communication).
Other connections to embodied rhetoric exist in the chapters describing mediated
communication, wherein human agents attempt to speak, not only on behalf of, but as the
translator for animal subjects, providing them with something closer to a human voice of their
own. This closely resembles Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson’s concept of “mediated rhetoricity” in the
closely-related fields of embodied rhetoric and disability studies (161). Nick Trujillo’s fabulous
hybrid essay in Plec’s volume skillfully interweaves explorations of communication theory
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applied to human-canine relationships with his own (heart-wrenching) personal narrative about
the loss of three beloved dogs and his wife of many years. While Trujillo attempts to give the
canines a voice in his narrative, he also hints at ways dogs mediate on our behalf, as well. He
uses uncertainty reduction theory to explain one widely-acknowledged benefit of pet
guardianship, which is their ability to act as a social lubricant for human interactions. When
humans meet, they seek to reduce their uncertainty about one another; for dog lovers, the sight of
other people with dogs allows for quicker relief of that uncertainty, as well as a common interest
to break the ice (119).
But mediation in either direction has its dangers. In Tema Milstein’s essay about an
incident between a zoo gorilla named Akenji and a group of young children who had been
verbally taunting him in his enclosure, Milstein describes how the zoo guide potentially
misrepresents the actions of a frustrated animal in order to provide a “soft” explanation for a very
sad situation, one suspects in order to shelter children from the harsh realities of animal captivity
and to put a happy face on zoo life. As Akenji banged violently on the glass of his enclosure, the
guide asked the children why they thought he was doing that. The children provided a few
explanations, before the guide offered them the “correct” interpretation of the gorilla’s outburst –
that he was merely showing off for them (176). This interpretation is dubious at best, and the
guide is forced to employ the full power of her ethos as adult and teacher to pacify the children
who are (rightly) dissatisfied with her answer. What this demonstrates is not so much mediation
as a bulldozing over the communicative act of another creature, in order to maintain the fantasy
of the ideal zoo, populated entirely by happy and willing animal performers, whose lives are
enhanced and prolonged by their captivity.
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As one might expect in a collection of essays on human and nonhuman animal
communication, some of the articles are (necessarily) anthropocentric. Part of this stems from the
fact that we only understand the language or general thought processes (as self-reported,
linguistically) of other humans. Another reason is that some situations are created by humans to
make human meaning, in spite of the potentially very different meanings other animals might
take away from the same situations. If we take, for instance, Leigh Bernacchi’s essay on birdhuman ritual communication, it is really a piece about human-human communication about
birds, not about human communication with birds. An example of this approach is her
explanation of how birds communicate in both life and death, referring especially to the use of
canaries as disposable tools for the detection of poisonous levels of methane or carbon dioxide in
coal mines (143). The death of these birds is meaningful as a warning to humans only – the birds
themselves had no part in creating the indexical relationship between the concepts [dead canary]
and [poisonous gas]. The message they might take from such interactions (in the brief moments
before their deaths) is both stark and out of their control.
The anthropocentric is expected in human essays on animal communication, and the
limitations of these approaches must be duly acknowledged. Moreover, there is a point at which
the reader asks “Why are we reading about nonhuman animals at all, if this is merely another
case of humans using animals to make human meanings?” This is an especially important
question in a small minority of essays that seem somewhat alien to the theme of the collection.
Carrie Packwood Freeman’s piece on the “go veg” movement, while a wonderful article, is
somewhat vexing, as the connection with the rest of the volume is a tenuous one at best. The
essay describes five animal rights campaigns with the goal of turning people vegetarian, and how
the construction of vegetarian values serves “the motivation and identity function of the social
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movement framing process” (93). Sadly, this has nothing to do with nonhuman animal
communication, and the inclusion feels somewhat forced. Nonetheless, the essay might be of
considerable interest to readers of this journal, as it has a stronger connection to animal studies
than to animal communication.
Despite some minor criticism about the loose connection to theme, the sheer variety of
approaches to internatural communication also represents the collection’s greatest strength.
Where the volume really shines is in presenting new avenues of study, or new ways of
envisioning old questions in terms of animal studies. Susannah Bunny LeBaron’s essay on
acknowledging difference without creating hierarchy channels Derrida’s later work on the
human animal and brings it to bear on the emergent re-questioning of the human/animal
dichotomy (Derrida and Mallet). Rightly, she insists that if we make such a distinction between
what is human and what is animal, it is in increasingly arbitrary terms that we, occupying the
privileged side of the binary, define ourselves into. She asks “by what pretense of objectivity or
rationality have we determined that those differences make us better than those we have
categorized by our criteria” (249)?
Such questions signal the present state of affairs in the fields of communication and
rhetoric and composition: most people still tacitly assume that human linguistic communication
is the best, most complex, or only form of symbolic communication, and that it is the only form
worthy of study. However, evidence from the last few decades of ethological study has shown
that we might not even be the best at symbolic communication, let alone the only symbol-using
species. A slow shift toward cross-species study has begun in isolated corners of these
disciplines, but a sea change is necessary. For, understanding the great variety of ways beings
communicate in nature is essential to understanding the evolution of our own persuasive tools.
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Moreover, animal rhetorics are interesting and worthy of study in their own right. We should
take a cue from rare volumes like Plec’s, and realize that we humans are limited in our ability to
detect communicative efforts even within the narrow range of five senses we traditionally
recognize, let alone in the "extrasensory” realms of ant pheromones, the electric fields of
Amazon River fishes, or the echolocation of dolphins. To then assume that we provide the best
example of communication, or the most sophisticated, is to make an argument from extreme
ignorance. Until we can even begin to decipher the supposedly simple languages of other
animals, we have no basis for true comparison. With increased study of human and nonhuman
animal communication, it may be possible to change this, but there is much work to be done.
References
Bernacchi, Leigh A. "Flocking: bird-human ritual communication." Perspectives on HumanAnimal Communication: Internatural Communication. Ed. Emily Plec. New York:
Routledge, 2013. 142-61. Print.
Derrida, Jacques, and Marie-Louise Mallet. The Animal That Therefore I Am. New York:
Fordham UP, 2008. Print.
Freeman, Carrie Packwood. "Stepping up to the veggie plate: framing veganism as living your
values." Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication.
Ed. Emily Plec. New York: Routledge, 2013. 93-112. Print.
Griffin, Donald R. Animal minds: beyond cognition to consciousness: Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2001. Print.
Kennedy, George A. Comparative rhetoric: an historical and cross-cultural introduction. New
York: Oxford UP, 1988. Print.
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LeBaron, Susannah Bunny. "Difference without hierarchy: narrative paradigms and critical
animal studies, a meditation on communication." Perspectives on Human-Animal
Communication: Internatural Communication. Ed. Emily Plec. New York: Routledge,
2013. 245-63. Print.
Lewiecki-Wilson, Cynthia. "Rethinking Rhetoric through Mental Disabilities." Rhetoric Review
22.2 (2003):156-167. Print.
Milstein, Tema. "Banging on the divide: cultural reflection and refraction at the zoo."
Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication. Ed.
Emily Plec. New York: Routledge, 2013. 162-81. Print.
Parrish, Alex C. Adaptive Rhetoric: Evolution, Culture, and the Art of Persuasion, Routledge
Studies in Rhetoric and Communication. New York: Routledge. Print.
Plec, Emily. Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication:
New York: Routledge, 2013. Print.
Trujillo, Nick. "The 'Golden' Bond: Exploring Human-Canine Relationships with a Retriever."
Perspectives on Human-Animal Communication: Internatural Communication. Ed.
Emily Plec. New York: Routledge, 2013. 113-28. Print.
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Review: On Their Own Terms (2010), Lee Hall, Nectar Bat Press.
Anastasia Yarbrough*
Keywords: animal sovereignty, habitat conservation, free-living animal, purpose-bred animal,
reproductive freedom, the vegan ideal
On Their Own Terms by Lee Hall is an engaging read that makes the theoretical subject
of animal rights accessible to a wide audience. It also raises critical questions about the vision
and goals of the movement. I must say that this book is the most exhilarating animal rights book
I have a read in a long time. I certainly hope that the conversation will continue in the animal
rights community.
The main premise of this book is to urge animal rights activists to reassess how we use
the term “animal rights” and re-direct our efforts to advance it. Rather than devote ourselves
almost exclusively to the groups Hall labels as “purpose-bred animals,” we should focus on
advancing rights to the animal group that, Lee argues, could actually benefit from rights—freeliving animals.
If animal rights means the right to live on your own terms, not on the terms of the
people who have subjugated you, then a true step in its direction could manifest
itself in the work to preserve the autonomy of a free-living community of animals,
while presenting the argument for conscientious objection to the use of animals as
products or entertainment attractions. (112)
In fact, Hall reiterates throughout the book that domesticated animals, or purpose-bred
animals, can never truly have what rights protect—autonomy. Therefore, according to Lee,
using a feminist care ethic is more appropriate with domesticated animals and the best we can
*
Anastasia Yarbrough is a Facilitator at Inner Activism Services. Contact: anastasia@inneractivism.com
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strive for in a path to animal rights is to end the breeding of purpose-bred animals, for they are
occupying precious space that free-living animals need. As Hall states, “every bigger cage and
every cleared pasture, on a finite planet, means less untamed spaces; and it’s in those space that
animal rights will be found” (121).
The author spends the entire book discussing what animal advocacy should be doing,
what it should be striving for, and what the movement should not be doing. It is as much a
treatise on animal ethics as it is a manifesto. Hall highlights the ethical pitfalls of theoretical and
institutional developments in the animal rights movement since the 1970s. Without naming them
directly, Hall targets large animal advocacy organizations that have made controversial decisions
that have roused turbulence in the movement and muddied the public perception and
understanding of animal rights. As one step to address this problem, the author urges activist
readers to reclaim the word “welfare” away from its current commercialized, sell-out
connotation.
Activists need to know that genuine animal-welfare work supports the movement and
should be supported in return. The animal-rights proposal appreciates the efforts of one
who traps domesticated cats in feral colonies, then returns them, neutered, to their areas
and continues to feed and care for them and offer them as much shelter and comfort as
possible…During times of enslavement, such protective ownership has been a fact of life.
(43)
In this vein, Hall encourages activists to envision our work as promoting the welfare of
individual animals (those who must rely on our care) and promoting a movement that respects
free-living animals’ autonomy.
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At the end of the book, Hall calls for a much-needed alliance between the animal rights
and environmental movements to address the lack of ecological attention in the animal rights
movement and the lack of wild animal rights in environmental rhetoric. The author believes that
the joining of these two movements would advance a unified movement that would allow for
animals to live truly on their own terms. However, the simplicity presented throughout the book
from start to finish is both inspiring and disheartening. If our problems were simply a matter of
sticking to principle, then the dilemmas we face in the struggle for animal rights would just
require a solution of re-evaluation and sticking to integrity. The on-going struggle for animal
rights activists is to receive the continual feedback that their integrity is actually making a
difference for real animals and future generations of animals. Hall instead focuses on the
principles rather than the outcomes.
Human and Wildlife Conflict
In the first chapter, Hall calls for rescue and rehabilitation projects “to challenge the
whole idea that all other animals’ fates should hinge on our needs and our decisions” (p. 44).
Otherwise, the work can begin to look like a hobby farm or a petting zoo. This is where the
emphasis on principle and purpose is most important. The author reiterates that the animal rights
movement should not strive “to make a Garden of Eden for other animals within our society but
rather to change society so we respect their own ways of being” (48). However, this stance
applies only to those groups Hall refers to as “free-living animals”; treating domesticated
animals as refugees of a cruel, industrial society can still be in alignment with the proposed goal.
The responsible refuge, as Hall presents it, works steadfastly toward the animal rights ideal and
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at the same time encourages a cultivation of “respect for free-living animals’ interest in having
their habitats unmolested,” (49). Hall mentioned Emberwood Lane Refuge as an example.
I can’t help but wonder where human habitat exists in this vision of upholding other
animals’ interest in “having their habitats unmolested.” Where does interspecies community
come into play? How can we think of “humanity as contributors in an interconnected
biocommunity” and “leave their habitats unmolested” at the same time? Though the book
encourages animal rights activists to incorporate ecological consideration into our theory and
praxis, the presented solution to “leave free-living animals alone” and their habitats
“unmolested” is not entirely ecological; it is romantic. Leaving animals alone by not trafficking
them alive and dead around the world is one thing; ending fracking or stopping the construction
of dams that flood and displace entire interspecies communities is another thing: leaving “their
habitats unmolested” is impossible.
Because this book is written from a white middle-class American perspective, a major
pitfall in this stance is that it assumes that the only animals who deserve and need to subsist off
the land (and water) are nonhuman. Unfortunately, capitalism, colonialism, and ecological
imperialism are forces that are pushing humans further and further away from living and
subsiding directly in place. Hall provides a perfect example of US imperialism at work and its
impact on free-living animals:
Evidently, zoo experts in the United States—the world’s largest importer and consumer
of wood products—believe training orangutans to relinquish their own knowledge, habits
and traditions is preferred over training humans to stop usurping their habitat for
ourselves and all the animals we breed into our service. (169)
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As domestic animal agriculture and monocrop plantations continue to engulf land all around the
world under the guise of sustainable economic development, conflicts arise between rural
humans trying to improve their quality of life and free-living animals trying to survive in an
ever-shrinking world. Common “solutions” to these conflicts often come at the expense of the
animals, through dislocation, hazing, and often good old-fashioned poisoning and shooting.
Suppose animal rights, as Hall proposes, were a major consideration in human-wildlife
conflict management. The difficult choice for the managers would remain the same: “I
understand that these free-living animals have to eat, but the people have to eat too.” How the
people eat is being shaped by capitalism and imperialism, and thus becoming more difficult to
control. Killing and displacing wild animals is an easier answer, albeit undesirable for the
managers, but capitalism and weak governments provide good incentive to take the easier road.
As more managers face this difficult choice, it is not surprising to find more (formerly) freeliving animals dead and in captivity. Therefore, I do not think it serves real animal rights
activists now or real animals now to advance the “leave animals and their habitats alone” mantra
because as long as humans exist, animals will always play an integral role in humans’ lives and
livelihoods. Our challenge is coexisting with and negotiating with free-living animals without
trying to control them. Hall’s emphasis on sticking to principle does have merit. In fact,
returning to principle is crucial when the goals seem so big and disconnected from our daily
grind for animal rights:
Advocacy means speaking with people in the language of justice. Our goals should never
be hidden; our message must be clear and consistent for every audience. If animal
sanctuaries need help, let’s support them. But let’s also cultivate the kind of thinking and
discussions that will stop making these refuges necessary. (50)
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Nonhuman Animal Ethics
In chapters two through five, Hall explores the theoretical foundation of the mainstream
animal rights movement, particularly the theories that have resulted in the schism between
welfare and rights and the vegan principle. Chapter Two focuses on presenting and critiquing
Peter Singer’s utilitarian animal ethic. Hall begins by questioning the negative connotation pain
has in Singer’s theory and his emphasis on the right not to suffer: “If we consider the interest in
life worth defending, we must acknowledge that pain has a role in that theory, for pain promotes
our ability to survive and thrive” (55, original emphasis).
Basically, ending animal suffering would mean ending conscious life as we know it (55).
Hall refers to the example of two Pakistani children born with genetic mutations that did not
allow them to feel pain which led both of them to severe self-mutilation and eventually death.
The author goes on to criticize the consequences of applying Singer’s theory to animal advocacy
for it has turned animal advocacy organizations into animal handling and animal killing
consultants for the animal exploitation industries in their crusade to minimize the amount of net
suffering—as if suffering can be quantified.
As an alternative to this, Hall presents the vegan principle: we should reject all animal
industry practices on principle and opt out of any kind of participation. Hall uses this same
stance in Chapter Four’s summary and critique of Tom Regan and Gary Francione. Hall
challenges the ableist premises of Regan’s analysis of “the value of the lives lived” as well as the
theory’s inability to empower activists to handle real conflict between the particular human
interest and the animal other interest, where Hall stresses “rights matter most.”
Once lives are differently valued, oppressive results are unlikely to wait for rare
emergencies. After all, if less aesthetic, scientific, and sacramental interests means [sic.]
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expendability in an exceptional case, the way is open for the claim that overriding
another being’s interests on an ordinary day could be ethical (82-3)
Of all the theories presented, Hall is most aligned with Francione’s abolitionist approach but still
draws criticisms. In response to both Regan’s and Francione’s work, Hall laments: “Abolitionist
animal-rights theory has largely neglected the immensely important point that wolves (like apes,
deer, and all free-living animals), as long as they and their habitats exist, could genuinely benefit
from legal rights; dogs could not” (85). Hall also criticizes Francione’s reliance on the sentience
rhetoric for the deciding line of moral consideration of animals and suggests that the vegan
platform as presented by Donald Watson’s vegan society in 1944 has the answer: reject the use
of all animal products and all forms of exploitation of and cruelty to the animal sphere.
While abolition addresses what other animals will not be, and this is indeed important,
what’s essential is what and who they are, and how we come to grips with that. This all
depends on what and who we strive to become. Are we willing to relinquish our
authority, our control? (93)
Veganism as the Answer
Chapters Four and Five are devoted entirely to the vegan ideal. Hall spends half of the
introduction to veganism as a contradiction to Francione’s Introduction to Animal Rights and
Rain Without Thunder. Hall champions veganism as the paradigm to address all the theoretical
problems of mainstream animal rights; it just needs to be redefined. Hall relies on Donald
Watson’s initial definition as the basis. The position is considered perfect. If a reader were
basing her analysis of veganism on this book alone, she would have to conclude that veganism is
the answer to all of our problems, at least where nonhuman animals are concerned, but also,
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according to Hall, where the planet is concerned. “For surely there is no better, more
straightforward advocacy for animals used in industries than to opt out of using them—by
becoming vegan” (108).
Vegan organic (or veganic) agriculture is presented as a perfect alternative to current
conventional and organic agriculture. Fortunately, humans around the world have been
practicing semblances of veganic agriculture long before Rosa Dalziell O’Brien, Kenneth Dalziel
O’Brien, and May Bruce came up with the system or the name. Native peoples of Central
America prior to European colonialism managed to build civilizations on what we could consider
vegan organic agriculture. However, even veganic agriculture did not protect them against soil
erosion and the population’s carrying capacity, which eventually made the system unsustainable.
Because veganic agriculture relies on the production of green manure and compost and the input
of herbivorous human wastes for soil fertility, it is not a system that can be duplicated
sustainably on as large a scale as conventional agriculture. And perhaps that is exactly the point.
Veganic agriculture is most effective at the community level, rather than the national or global
levels.
Veganism is presented as the ultimate answer to advancing animal rights by 1) ending the
breeding of domesticated animals and 2) freeing up land for free-living animals. At our current
population levels and inability to distinguish between what we need and want, how can we
expect that vegan consumption will free up land so long as the machinations of capitalism,
colonialism, and ecological imperialism are at work? How can veganism allow us to opt out of
tropical rainforest destruction or dependency on fossil fuels? And what of the humans whose
bodies do not respond well to a vegan diet? What happens to them? In this sense, Hall presents
the tautology of veganism: the vegan ideal becomes what we need it to be in this particular
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approach to and vision for animal rights. And the vegan ideal Hall presents is inspiring: “being
mindful of animals’ connections with their activities and communities…humans’ cultivating
respect for their interests in the climate, nutrients, and landscape, the land, water, and air they
require to experience autonomy…supporting animals’ rights to be let alone” (121-3). But this
book is also meant to be a thinking ground for “what a serious theory of animal rights means for
the real world.” This requires real challenges to veganism that we often disregard and that the
author did not address.
Enduring Freedom
Lee Hall is one of the few authors who has emphasized the importance of free-living wild
animals and ecosystems to animal rights and the importance of animal rights to environmental
concerns. Though it is a less uncommon bridge in ecofeminist literature (for example, Marti
Kheel’s analysis of hunting and wildlife management rhetoric), in mainstream animal rights
literature, free-living wild animals are virtually non-existent. In redefining animal rights from its
mainstream conception, Hall explains that:
Animal rights involves freedom from, rather than equality within, a global human
society. This means theoretical work is needed to distinguish groups of animals whose
existence results from selective breeding (those…who must rely on the care ethic as long
as they are here) and those who could flourish on their own terms. (166)
In Chapter Six, Hall references feminist analyses of the logic of domination without
actually referring to this theory or Karen Warren, the ecofeminist philosopher most attributed to
the theory. Hall draws comparisons between women and animals, black women and animals,
and in particular, references Zora Neale Hurston’s analysis of the “pet Negro” system where
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white elites of the southern United States customarily singled out select black workers for gifts
and privileges,thereby complicating the systemic racial inequality and violence.
The potential of the animal rights movement hinges on our motivation to visit the deep
level at which all oppressions connect, from whence they spawn social injustice,
environmental injustice, and the degradation of the ecology and living beings. (166)
Fascinatingly, Hall encourages readers to contemplate a black feminist approach to
understanding injustice: intersectionality. Hall does this without referring to the term or any of
the thinkers associated with it. Yet, when Hall concludes again and again throughout the book,
that autonomy is neither possible nor relevant for domestic animals, I can’t help but recall similar
arguments made by slavery apologetics concerning black people in America—that black people
could not survive beyond the confines of the institutions we were bred and traded to labor in.
However, Hall’s argument for purpose-bred animals never having use for rights is worth
examining.
In response to a law student’s blog post re-conceptualizing rights of companion animals
as likened to the rights of children, Hall argued that the comparison does not work.
Children are not bred to be commodities; children are rarely locked in or chained to a
house. Most of those who endure maltreatment, thank goodness, have a chance of being
heard and helped by teachers or others in the community. Eventually, children grow out
of dependency on their caregivers. (187)
Hall has a valid point. While unwanted children are born all the time in unsustainable conditions
and the plight of children not born “citizens” tends to be less visible to the legal protection
system, for the most part, child abuse is met with the strictest and harshest of punishments. The
most powerful point Hall made was that “children eventually grow out of dependency on their
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caregivers.” That is the key distinction. Hall argues that purpose-bred animals are bred and
conditioned to be forever dependent on their human owners. Through neoteny, they essentially
never grow up. Dogs, in particular, are selectively bred all the time to exude submissiveness and
dependency. Assertive dogs and dogs not interested in humans are “weeded out.” But what
about when domestic animals regain their reproductive freedom and become genuinely feral?
That suggests purpose-bred animals, when given the space, time, and opportunity, can reclaim
their lives and advance what we would consider animal rights. The ecological consequences,
however, can be devastating, and in turn, their reproductive freedom and feralness become
interpreted as extensions of human destruction and ecological imperialism (e.g., Alfred Crosby’s
Ecological Imperialism).
Hall challenges the caring pragmatist approach regarding the birth control of free-living
animals but simultaneously says it is within the sphere of animal rights to phase out the breeding
of domesticated animals—whether it’s on their own terms or not. So basically, Hall argues for
the reproductive freedom of wild animals and the reproductive control of domestic animals.
What about reproductive freedom of “domestic” animals?
The author also refers to examples such as “feral” cat populations in urban centers and
how they depend on humans to feed them and rely on human infrastructure for shelter and
rearing. However, I think this argument is misleading and oversimplifies the reality of becoming
feral. While it is true that many “feral” cat colonies are supported directly by local human
populations, smaller but real numbers of cat colonies consist of individuals who subsist in the
sewers and ditches of urban environments almost exclusively on undomesticated “domestic”
animals such as house mice, brown rats, and Norway rats. Over the past thirty years, studies of
feral cat diets in both North America and Oceania showed that the bulk of their diet consists of
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small mammals (Coman and Brunner 1974; Zavaleta, Hobbs, and Mooney 2001; Nogales et al
2004). Unfortunately, they obtained this information through state-sanctioned lethal
management by trapping, killing, and looking at the contents of the cats’ stomachs. The
researchers found that the cats also subsisted on rabbits, chipmunks, shrews, squirrels, lizards,
and songbirds to a lesser degree—the latter group beingof great concern to ornithologists and
conservationists (as well as the author), who campaign against free-roaming domestic cats.
Since the major theme of this book is to offer pressing questions that challenge us to
envision animals beyond the status quo, I offer this question: why is it impossible for
domesticated animals to experience collective self-reliance? The author is convinced that
domesticated animals uniformly have no chance of benefiting from rights because they will
forever be dependent on humans, that the only place for domesticated animals is as cogs in the
wheels of industry and society. What’s missing from this book is the importance of reproductive
freedom to animal rights. It takes generations of reproductive freedom to begin to overcome
centuries of institutionalized slavery. Now imagine overcoming thousands of years. The easy
answer is to give up and conclude the best solution is that they all disappear. But this is just
another “solution” of reproductive control.
Respecting other living beings’ reproductive freedom is not easy for most human
cultures, so it is not surprising that animal advocates may consider reproductive freedom for
traditionally domesticated animals impossible. VINE Sanctuary, an ecofeminist animal
liberation sanctuary in Vermont, explores daily the possibilities of reproductive freedom and the
impact it has on animals living on their own terms. The work is not easy, but they are a living
example that it’s not impossible either and that this, like any cultural-ecological shift, is a
process. What happens to a population when they are able to exercise reproductive freedom
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within the axioms of ecology? They find their way or die trying. In the last two hundred years,
we have examples that show domesticated animals finding their way and becoming feral. Rock
pigeons are a popular example. Feral pigs and feral goats on islands in the Pacific. Feral horses
in the southwest United States. These are all examples of domesticated animals finding their
way. They may not be examples of native wild animals living in ecological harmony, but we
have to also admit to ourselves that in a globalized society, the boundaries of native and
nonnative are getting murky and ecosystems are changing to accommodate that. So I challenge
us to see beyond the stand that would have us believe that feral animals are impossible. They are
not impossible. They are not easy to live with or control. Their freedom even offers immediate
ecological consequences. But so does human existence.
On Their Own Terms challenges us to re-think “animal rights” and really meet head-on
these problems which shake our theoretical foundations, our understanding of the animals for
whom we advocate, and our community solidarity. I applaud Hall’s efforts to initiate this
conversation, and I hope that collectively we have the motivation, the discipline, and the courage
to continue this deeply difficult topic.
References
Coman, B.J., and Brunner, H. "Food habits of the feral house cat in Victoria." The Journal of
Wildlife Management 36 (1972): 848-853. Print.
Nogales, Manuel, Aurelio Martín, Bernie R. Tershy, C. Josh Donlan, Dick Veitch, Néstor Puerta,
Bill Wood, and Jesús Alonso." A Review of Feral Cat Eradication on Islands."
Conservation Biology 18.2 (2004): 310-319. Print.
Zavaleta, Erika S., Richard J. Hobbs, and Harold A. Mooney. "Viewing invasive species removal
in a whole-ecosystem context." Trends in Ecology & Evolution 16.8 (2001): 454-459.
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Editorial Objectives
The journal for Critical Animal Studies is open to all scholars and activists. The journal was
established for the purpose of fostering academic study of critical animal issues in contemporary
society. While animal studies is increasingly becoming a field of importance in the academy,
much work being done under this moniker takes a reformist or depoliticized approach that fails
to mount a more serious critique of underlying issues of political economy and speciesist
philosophy. JCAS is an interdisciplinary journal with an emphasis on animal liberation
philosophy and policy issues. The journal was designed to build up the common activist’s
knowledge of animal liberation while at the same time appealing to academic specialists. We
encourage and actively pursue a diversity of viewpoints of contributors from the frontlines of
activism to academics. We have created the journal for the purpose of facilitating communication
between the many diverse perspectives of the animal liberation movement. Thus, we especially
encourage submissions that seek to create new syntheses between differing disputing parties and
to explore paradigms not currently examined.
Suggested Topics
Papers are welcomed on any area of animal liberation philosophy from any discipline, and
presenters are encouraged to share theses or dissertation chapters. Because a major goal of the
Institute for Critical Animal Studies is to foster philosophical, critical, and analytical thinking
about animal liberation, papers that contribute to this project will be given priority (especially
papers that address critical theory, political philosophy, social movement analysis, tactical
analysis, feminism, activism and academia, Continental philosophy, or post-colonial
perspectives). We especially encourage contributions that engage animal liberation in disciplines
and debates that have received little previous attention.
Review Process
Each paper submitted is initially reviewed for general suitability for publication; suitable
submissions will be read by at least two members of the journal’s editorial board.
Manuscript Requirements
The manuscript should be in MS Word format and follow MLA guidelines. All submissions
should be double-spaced and in 12 point Times New Roman. Good quality electronic copies of
all figures and tables should also be provided. All manuscripts should conform to American
spelling.
As a guide, we ask that regular essays and reviews be between 2000-8000 words and have
limited endnotes. In exceptional circumstances, JCAS will consider publishing extended essays.
Authors should supply a brief abstract of the paper (of no more than 250 words). A brief
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autobiographical note should be supplied which includes full names, affiliation, email address,
and full contact details.
Copyright
Articles submitted to JCAS should be original contributions and should not be under
consideration for any other publication at the same time. For ease of dissemination and to ensure
proper policing use, papers and contributions become the legal copyright of the publisher unless
otherwise agreed.
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