I found this book by Samantha Hurn incredibly interesting, so much so that I ended up taking almost 9000 words of quotes in a cover to cover reading, as just so many of the areas she discussed were of the upmost interest and importance to my own work. I have also attached annotations to those which I feel need further discussion, analysis or interpretation, however much of it already links to other aspects of disucssion in similar literature I have already read. However Hurn collates much of the argument for 'bringing in the animal' into an eloquently worded, well referenced discussion.
As Eugenia Shanklin noted in her own reviews of anthropological interest in animals up until the mid 1980s ‘the investigation of human and animal interaction may well be one of the most fruitful endeavours of anthropology’ (1985: 380) The reasons given by Shanklin include the diverse ways in which ‘animals are used, how they function in various societies, and how their many meanings are derived’ (1985: 379-80). To use (and adapt) the words of the philosopher Donna Haraway: ‘we [anthropologists] polish an animal mirror to look for ourselves [and what it means to be human]’ (1991: 21). 3Indeed, regardless of our own individual perspectives on the issue there persists, for many, especially those who hail from within a mainstream Euro-American ‘scientific’ tradition, the assumption that nature stands in binary opposition to culture, something ‘other’ and ‘out there’, awaiting human action in order to acquire meaning. At the core of this premise lies the human-animal dualism. Animals are the antithesis of humans. ‘Culture’, we are often led to believe, elevates human above other animals and the natural world. Such polarized thought becomes unsettled however, when confronted with the increasingly widespread recognition that, in addition to biological continuity between humans and animals, many of the defining characteristics of ‘being human’ (such as the possession of ‘culture’, language, conscious thought and so on) are also found, in varying degrees, outside of the human species. 4That anthropologists have tended to view the nonhuman members of the societies they study in an objectified manner – as ‘things’ in relation to human subjects, as opposed to active social agents in their own right – reveals a great deal about the world views of the anthropologists in question. So, while Haraway has a point, many scholars who comment on the use of animals in human societies do not necessarily polish the animal mirror in a conscious fashion. 4Unfortunately it is necessary here for the sake of clarity and because of constraints of space to focus the following discussion primarily on human interactions with other mammals. This raises an important issue worthy of further consideration because in prioritizing the class mammalia I am guilty of promoting those ‘others’ who are most ‘like us’ at the expense of those whom it is more difficult to engage. So, while what follows will be to all intents and purposes, mammal-centric, the implications of this editorial design will be revisited and discussed in relation to many of the themes covered in the book. 4A great deal of variation and inconsistency occurs in relation to the ways in which humans think about and interact with animals. Given their comparative approach to the study of human culture and society, anthropologists are particularly well positioned to be able to scrutinize these human-animal relationships. Some humans eat animals, but only certain animals, and the animals which are deemed edible vary to such an extent both within and between cultures that dietary preferences and taboos have referred to as riddles of culture. (Harris, 1973: 35) 6Some scholars argue that, in addition to depicting the obvious functional relationships between hunter and prey, these paintings also represent spiritual connections which have united humans and animals in the context of a hunter-gatherer mode of subsistence since the Paleolithic. The animals are depicted in great detail, in stark contrast to the accompanying matchstick-style human hunters, and such contrast is suggestive of the reverence with which humans once regarded the animals on whose lives and deaths their own survival depended. 7Almost every aspect of human existence in the post-domestic world required input from animals at some stage in the proceedings, from the food we eat and clothes we wear to the medicines upon which our lives depend. It is often assumed that in contemporary post-domestic societies humans are more ‘removed’ from ‘nature’ and ‘animals’ (a premise which subsequent chapters will investigate and challenge), while in many of the ‘domestic’ (or pre-domestic) societies which have traditionally been the focus of anthropological attention, humans and animals live in much closer proximity. A consideration of such subsistence arrangements is just one of numerous ways in which anthropologists try to shed light on conflicting attitudes and relationships between humans and animals. 8Yes, a woman suckling a piglet might be ‘weird’ by some standards, but is it any ‘weirder’ than the practice of shooting newborn calves in the head and plugging their mother’s udders into industrial suction pumps to provide milk for human children? Which is equally ‘shocking’ practice when presented in such stark terms. What is so beneficial about an anthropological approach to anthropological approach to anthrozoology is that, in the process of looking at the ways in which others interact with animals, we are provided with a lens through which we can evaluate animals, we are provided with a lens through which we can evaluate our won taken-for-granted assumptions and maybe, in the process, change the way we think about other humans and other animals. 10The situation becomes even more confusing when the term ‘animality’ is considered and we are told that humans are, at least in part, animals; ‘1. The animal side of man as opposed to the intellectual or spiritual. 2. The characteristics of the animal.’
So ‘man’ has an animal side, the side which needs to be kept in check and overcome. As the philosopher Mary Midgley notes (1994b: 192), human behaviours which are regarded as socially undesirable are labelled animalistic and this label can be applied to achieve both moral and political ends.When human beings behave really badly, they are said to behave ‘like animals’, however unlike their acts may be to those that any other species could perform. This is a way of disowning the motives concerned and distancing them from the rest of us. 14Is it because I speak to you, that you judge I have feeling, memory, ideas? Well, I do not speak to you; you see me going to the desk where I remember having shut it, finding it, reading it joyfully. You judge that I have experienced the feelings of distress and that of pleasure, that I have memory and understanding. Bring the same judgement to bear on this dog which has lost its master, which has sought him on every road with sorrowful cries, which enters the house agitated, uneasy, which goes down the stairs, up the stairs, from room to room, which at last finds in his study the master it loves, and which shows him its joy by its cries of delight, bit its leaps, by its caresses. Barbarians seize this dog, which in friendship surpasses man so prodigiously; they nail it on a table, and they dissect it alive in order to show the mesenteric veins. You discover in it all the same organs of feeling that are arranged in yourself. Answer me, machinist, has nature arranged all the means of feeling in this animal, so that it may not feel? Has it nerves in order to be impassable? Do not suppose this impertinent contradiction in nature. (Voltaire, 2010 [1764]: ‘Animals’) 15Because only free Greek men possessed the capacity for reason it was thus ‘natural’ for those privileged few to be served by lower beings who were ‘naturally’ subservient; women, non-Greeks (‘barbarians’) and, of course, animals: ‘Now if nature makes nothing incomplete, and nothing in vein, the inference must be that she has made all animals for the sake of man’ (Aristotle, 2005, Book I, 11. 3 – 13: 7). 17While there are, and always have been, individuals who perceive animals as sentient beings, the widespread failure (or refusal?) to perceive the sentience of other animals provided powerful justifications for their treatment at human hands: “So far as animals are concerned we have no duties. Animals are not self-conscious, and are there merely as a means to an end. That end is man’ (Kant, 1930, 239). Given the innumerable ways in which humans are reliant upon the exploitation of other animals, it is perhaps unsurprising that these views have become so widely accepted. 18While the land-hungry colonizers found animalistic savages in the colonies, in the wake of the Industrial Revolution the European bourgeoisie saw in the native people of newly discovered natural paradises an attractive metaphor and comparison for all that was wrong with industrial Europe – the ‘noble savage’ who lived in harmony with the environment. However, this positive imagery was both condescending (in the sense that it was influenced by an evolutionary perspective) and short-lived. With the advent of Victorian colonialism, the idea of the ‘noble savage’ was once again usurped by derogatory representations of, and attitudes towards native peoples, as described above; imperialist expansion, missionary activity and the cultural ‘improvement’ of the ‘primitives’, predominantly against their will, constituted the ‘white man’s burden’ (Kipling, 1899). 24First, anthropology has had a not altogether unjust reputation as the ‘handmaiden of colonialism’. The link between anthropology and colonialism has undeniably played a role in shaping the ways in which practitioners of the discipline think (or thought) about their ethnographic subjects. Prior to the reflexive turn, non -Western others were ‘primatives’, but in the postcolonial period, when anthropologists are at pains to distance themselves from the abuses of (some of) their disciplinary ancestors, many have shied away from thinking about animal ‘others’ and human-animal continuity for fear of re-opening old wounds. 25One final point is to consider how all of this comes together to make anthropologists particularly well placed to investigate human relationships with other animals. Humans habitually engage in ‘othering’ in their day-to-day interactions. This process of objectifying fellow humans in instances of war, genocide, rape, slave labour or violence and abuse of any kind is still regularly observed by anthropologists in a wide range of ethnographic situations. In the process, these ‘others’ are relegated to the status of lesser beings, typified in many contexts by animals. Thus the objectification of ‘others’ – human or nonhuman – in the past and in the contemporary world, justifies their treatment in the eyes and minds of the ‘abusers’. 26Definitions vary enormously; however, there appears to be a general consensus across cultural divides that a ‘person’ is an individual, animate, self-conscious being who becomes a person in a social context in which their individuality and intentionality is recognized and acknowledged by another (de Castro, 1998: 476; Kohn, 2008; see also Fortis, 2010). Again, de Waal makes a pertinent observation in relation to differences in approach between Japanese and European or North American primatologists, where the former happily recognize the personhood of their research subjects:Being the product of a culture that doesn’t set the human species apart as the only one with a soul, Imanishi [Japanese primatologist and founder of the sub-discipline ‘cultural or ethno-primatology’] had trouble with neither the idea of evolution nor that of humans as descendants of apes. To the Buddhist … mind, both ideas are eminently plausible, even likely, and there is nothing insulting about them. The smooth reception of this part of evolutionary theory – the continuity among all life forms – meant that questions about animal behaviour were from the start uncontaminated by feelings of superiority and aversion to attribution of emotions and intentions that paralyzed Western science. (2001: 116) 30Anthropologists have long believed that ‘culture’ provides the structure by which human thought is organised. It is through this process of cultural construction that the personhood of others is either attributed or denied. So, for example, if we are raised within a cultural context where ‘person’ equals ‘human’ we will expect, or rather be expected, to see humans and only humans as persons, regardless of whether or not our experience of non-human others leads us to doubt this premise. In a post-Enlightenment ‘scientific’ context, to challenge the axiom of human exceptionalism is to indulge in anthropomorphism, because while others we might think we see manifestations of personhood in animal others, what we are really doing is attributing human characteristics to animals. This is because only humans can be persons. 31Many anthropologists have been ‘forced’ to re-think constructivism as a result of their contact with other peoples who do not attribute personhood, but rather perceive it, because in their interactions with animals the personhood of these nonhuman others is revealed in no uncertain terms (Milton, 2005; Willerslev, 2007: 20). So in cases where humans are free from the constraints imposed by a particular world view which sets humans apart from animals or where they make a decision – consciously or otherwise – to reject it, the behaviours of other animals can be observed and interpreted in much the same way that humans observe and interpret the behaviours of members of their own species. Admittedly this is also a constructivism of sorts, as within certain cultures the recognition of personhood is part of the dominant world view! 31Indeed, Willerslev makes a point of fundamental import when he acknowledges that in animistic thought not all animals are accorded personhood at all times (2007: 21). Neither, for that matter, are all humans. De Castro for example observes that for many American peoples, strangers are not necessarily persons (1998: 475). Nor are children (Fortis, 2010). Personhood follows from embodied interactions, and the ways in which individual humans experience individual ‘others’ will inform whether or not they perceive in those ‘others’ the requisite characteristics of personhood. 32There are countless examples of individual animals who, when socialized with humans, can be taught all manner of complex behaviours. Koko, a female Lowland Gorilla has been part of such a research programme for over 30 years. Koko, along with other gorillas at the Gorilla Foundation, has been taught American Sign Language (ASL). Not only do they use ASL to communicate with other (Patterson and Cohn, 1990). Moreover as a result of her long term association with humans, Koko appears to have ’learnt’ how to communicate in detail her thoughts and emotions on issues ranging from death and her grief at losing her mate, Michael, her subsequent fear of her own mortality and her wish to have a baby, in addition to detailed information about her particular likes and dislikes. 34Indeed what is refer to as the ‘Clever Hans effect’ (de Waal et al,. 2008) is an issue among researchers concerned with understanding the cultural and cognitive abilities of animals. 34Humans stand apart from other animal species… because of the way they create, use and live with a wide variety of material objects. This world of man-made things modifies the natural world to provide a material environment as the context in which social interaction takes place. Things, both natural and man-made, are appropriated into human culture in such a way that they re-present the social relations of the culture, standing in for other human beings, carrying values, ideas and emotions. (1991:1) 36This reveals a hierarchical way of thinking about culture which, as already noted, is commonplace within the social sciences. However, as with ‘culture’ more generally, there is ample evidence for animals appropriating ‘natural’ and manipulated things into their cultures. Stone-handling, also observed in Japanese Macaques (Huffman and Quiatt, 1986; Leca et al., 2007) involves individual animals collecting stones and either rubbing them together (in a matter reminiscent of the human use of worry beads) or scattering them on the floor before collecting them up and repeating the process again. This behaviour is one of the first to be learnt by infants during socialization. 36Perry claims this is ‘because anthropologists found it more plausible to accept the notion of culture in the closest living relative to humans’ (2006: 173). Yet primates are not the only animals to exhibit complex behaviours which ethologists define as cultural. 37Carrion crows in the city of Sendai in Japan have discovered an ingenious way of cracking walnuts. They take the nuts and wait beside the road until the light turns red. Then they descend, place the nuts in front of the wheel of a car, and fly off. When the light turns green, they return and eat the pieces of the nuts that the vehicle has crushed. (Sax, 2003: 20; see also Nihei and Higuchi, 2001) 37Perhaps the most convincing evidence of this sort of symbolism in animals, where ‘inanimate’ objects are imbued with value and emotional significance is revealed in the practice of bone handling among African elephants (Douglas-Hamilton et al., 2006).
Elephants have been repeatedly observed interacting with the remains of dead conspecifics, and there is some evidence for elephants being particularly drawn to the bones and tusks of relatives. […] These behaviours do not appear to have any evolutionary advantage and on occasion actually put the bereaved in danger of attack from scavengers who are feeding on the remains (Douglas-Hamilton et al., 2006: 98)The particular attention paid to tusks and skulls suggest that the ‘mourners’ are confirming the identity of the deceased, as tusks and faces are frequently touched during social interactions between herd members when they are alive. This behaviour is suggestive of symbolic thought, as objects replace other persons, but, perhaps more pertinently, there is an emotional symbolism not observed in say, ‘symbolic’ honey bee behaviour. 38It is a commonly held assumption in the ‘Western’ world that there is a human realm, usually associated with ‘culture’, which is diametrically opposed to the nonhuman or animal realm, the realm of ‘nature’. This has been referred to as the ‘modernist’ perspective (or ‘Western paradigm’ [Palsson, 1996]) because it has been shaped by many of the defining features of modernity which include, for example, the hegemonic influence of Judaeo-Christian doctrine, the legacy of Cartesian metaphysical thought and widespread participation (or rather inculcation) in a global capitalist system (Bird-David, 1999; Franklin, 1999; 37The ‘West’ versus the ‘Rest’ opposition has been subjected to considerable anthropological scrutiny following the reflexive turn of the 1960s. In relation to ‘hunter-gatherers’ in particular, generally held assumptions about their mode of subsistence – which were arguably informed by hierarchal perspectives of social evolutionism and the perception of industrialization and a capitalist economy as the epitome of progress – were challenged in the wake of Marshall Sahlins’ controversial paper at the 1966 ‘Man the Hunter’ symposium and his subsequent treatise Stone age economics published in 1972. 42Tracking involves intense concentration resulting in a subjective experience of projecting oneself into the animal. The tracks indicate when the animal is starting to get tired; its stride becomes shorter, it kicks up more sand, and the distances between consecutive resting places become shorter.
When tracking an animal, one attempts to think like an animal in order to predict where it is going. Looking at its tracks, one visualizes the motion of the animal and feels that motion in one’s own body. Karoha explained: ‘When the kudu becomes tired you become strong. You take its energy. Your legs become free and you can run fast like yesterday; you feel just as strong at the end of the hunt as in the beginning.’ When the hunter finally runs the animal to exhaustion, it loses its will to flee and either drops to the ground or just stands looking at the approaching hunter with glazed eyes. Karoha explained that when a kudu’s eyes glaze over, it is a sign that it feels that there is noting it can do any more: ‘What you will see is that you are now controlling its mind. You are getting its mind. The eyes are no longer wild. You have taken the kudu into your own mind.’ The hunter will then finish off the animal with a spear. (Liebenberg, 2006: 1024) 44The ’respectful’, reciprocal relationship that obtains between hunter and prey described above, has also led to some anthropologists and environmental organizations to consider hunter-gatherers as indigenous conservationists, with an innate ‘ecological wisdom’ gained from their close proximity to the natural world (Ingold, 2000: 67-9) However, as Loretta Cormier notes of the Amazonian hunter-foragers, ‘in Amazonian thought, personhood in no ways suggests that animals are not legitimate prey. Arguably, Amazonian peoples have had little need to be conservationists except in the contexts of encroachment of Western society (2003: 155). 50In recent years the notion of ‘primitive ecological wisdom’ has been refuted as a myth by anthropologists such as Roy Ellen (1986) and Kay Milton (1996). While there are many indigenous peoples who show respect for the natural world, anthropological criticism has been directed at the consumption of ‘primitive ecological wisdom’ in the ‘West’ as another incarnation of the ‘noble savage’, to highlight all that is ‘wrong’ with modernity (Milton, 1996: 109; Thomas, 1983: 301-2). Perceiving ‘primitive ecological wisdom’ as dogma is also problematic because it sets up indigenous hunter-gatherers for a fall when they fail to live up to the ideal of an ecologically benign coexistence with nature. 50A more productive approach for all concerned is that espoused by anthropologists such as Ingold and Milton, who recognize that individuals perceive their environments directly as they go about their day-to-day business and respond accordingly. 51At the height of European colonialism, and in keeping with the influence of social evolutionism during that period, many scholars (for example, Childe, 1928; Engels, 1972 [1884]) subscribed to the view that domestication was a ‘revolution’ which saw Neolithic humans ‘conquer’ the ‘wilderness’ and their own savagery and move a step closer to civilization (see Anderson, 1997 for an interesting review from a geographer’s perspective). The scholarship of many contemporary archaeologists however recognizes that such a position presented a more accurate reflection of the colonial mindset than of the prehistoric past. It is now widely accepted that the shift from hunting and gathering to pastoralism and settled agriculture was not a sudden even, but rather a gradual process (Wilson, 2007: 102)Archaeologists and anthropologists have suggested that delayed return hunter-gatherers would have been more likely to make the transition to pastoralism than, for example, immediate return societies because, as Juliet Clutton-Brock (1989) notes, the emergent hierarchies between humans in delayed return systems made the subjugation of animals less of an ideological leap (see also Ingold, 1994a [1988], 2000; Serpell, 1996 [1986], 2000). In addition to a recognition of continuity between species and of personhood in nonhuman others, subsistence hunters have to engage in acts of mimetic empathy, literally putting themselves in the place of their quarry (Willerslev, 2004)Clutton-Brock – The walking larder: patterns of domestication, pastoralism and predation (1989)One alternative to the ‘climate change’ model is the ‘overkill’ hypothesis most commonly associated with ecologist Paul Martin (2007). Martin suggests that Paleolithic hunters were themselves responsible for the megafaunal extinctions which occurred during the Pleistocene, hunting once plentiful species such as the mammoth in a ruthless and unsustainable manner. As a result, cave paintings might represent trophies, a means by which hunters could document their hunting successes. Understandably this hypothesis has come in for some criticism, especially from Quarternary scientists and archaeologists who see interglacial climate change as a more likely explanation for mass extinctions which may have acted as a catalyst for domestication (see Haynes, 2007). 61In addition to the social impacts of domestication, the archaeological record reveals some rather significant morphological, pathological and nutritional changes which have come to be referred to as the ‘unforeseen consequences’ of domestication. This has led some academic commentators to suggest that in the process of domesticating other species, humans have ‘inadvertently’ domesticated themselves (Clark, 2007; Leach, 2003). 62Diamond (1998) has been particularly vocal in asserting that domestication was ‘the worst mistake in human history’. Indeed, archaeological evidence suggests that there are numerous negative consequences of domestication, including maladaptive morphological and behavioural changes in humans themselves, and also radical changes to the standards of living for all concerned (Diamond, 2002; Leach, 2007) 62The mobile lifestyle and varied diet of hunter-gatherers bestows numerous health benefits which are absent in many past and contemporary settled agricultural societies Aside from a reduction in leisure time (as more sustained effort is required to successfully raise livestock and crops) the reduction in dietary variation (Katz, 1987) led to greater susceptibility to disease (Hulsewe et al., 1999; Ulijaszek, 2000) and a restriction in childhood development, both of which reduce life expectancy (Cohen and Armelagos, 1984). The need to store surplus food also increased human exposure to pathogens such as bacteria and moulds (Brothwell and Brothwell, 1998 [1968]) 62Media coverage of public responses to global and national zoonotic epidemics such as SARS, foot and mouth, BSE and salmonella suggest that they are widely perceived as nature’s way of punishing humans for our disrespect and exploitation. Franklin notes that, as a rule, these nagging doubts are suppressed (a point also made by Bulliet, 2005), but intense media coverage following the foot and mouth outbreak in the UK in 2001 made it impossible to deny the fact that millions of animals would be slaughtered as a result of human negligence; the cause of the outbreak was linked to poor standards of hygiene. The all of these animals had been specifically bred to be slaughtered was not the point. What affected popular consciousness was the fact that their deaths were in vain, resulting in waste – something hunter-gatherers avoid at all costs, or else risk the devastating consequences of spiritual retribution. 68From a cultural materialist perspective, the milk-producing capacity of cows means they are worth more alive than dead, while from a structuralist perspective, cows represent life and are a symbolic surrogate mother of sorts. Indeed, Gandhi commented that ‘the cow’ was revered because, in addition to producing milk, ‘she made agriculture possible’. Cattle are important traction animals and Harris also noted that it made no economic sense to kill animals required in other aspects of food production (such as the growing of crops). Yet cows also compete with humans for scarce resources, so while ‘productive’ animals venerated the older generations are not so fortunate. As Maya Warrier notes; ‘cows in modern India are usually abandoned after their reproductive years and can be seen wandering the streets of India’s towns and villages in conditions of malnourishment and neglect.’ (2009: 276 n. 14). Harris (1979) also noted the inherent contradictions between atittudes and cations during his own fieldwork. In Kerala, southern India, Harris’s farming informants would indirectly allow male calves to starve by restricting their access to food, despite the prohibition on killing cattle. 89As psychologists Knight and his colleagues (2004) have noted, the experiences of individual animals can inform their perceptions of animals and lead them to acquire what they term ‘Belief in Animal Mind’ (BAM). BAM is one factor which can increase the likelihood of individuals becoming vegetarian in a post-domestic context; they recognize the ‘personhood’ of other animals, and so do not want animals to suffer. BAM can be compared with perspectivism of de Castro, and with Milton’s ‘ecology of emotions’; as a result of experiencing the sociality of animals (de Castro, 1998) through interactions which trigger emotional responses (Milton, 2002), individuals perceive in other animals qualities which they themselves can empathize with (Milton, 2005). This is significant in relation to food choice, and especially what might be termed ‘inverse incorporation’, that is, the decision not to eat certain foods because of the qualities perceived in their living forms. For many elective vegetarians for example, meat is taboo because the personhood of other animals is recognized. It therefore becomes a moral issue – why should other sentient, feeling, intelligent beings be killed to ensure the survival of humans who can meet their nutritional requirements by a whole host of other non-fatal means? 94After the publication of the Stern review of climate change, one of the main issues latched onto by the media was Stern’s assertion that: ‘Meat is a wasteful use of water and creates a lot of greenhouse gases. It puts enormous pressure on the world’s resources. A vegetarian diet is better.’ This example clearly shows that cultural materialism cannot adequately explain contemporary food choices. If it could, everyone in post-domestic societies would be vegetarian. Many are, but the adherents to the various permutations of vegetarianism constitute a minority on a global scale. Moreover, not every post-domestic consumer knows and fully comprehends the negative environmental consequences of large-scale farming, or cares about it enough to change their shopping and eating habits. 96In medieval Europe, for example, pet keeping was actively discouraged by religious authorities, at least among the lower classes, for several reasons. First, pets were regarded as wasteful because they diverted owners’ time and attention away from God (see Menache, 1998) and, second, because so many people were struggling to exist, pets were thought to divert resources away from humans whose need, by virtue of their species, was greater. As Serpell and Paul (1994) note, familiariy with animal was regarded by the devout as proof of a dirty, beastly and unholy life. The fact that many poor or elderly people took comfort in the companionship of animals was seen as dehumanizing because it elevated animals to human status. According to Serpell (1996 [1986]), this blurring of the distinction between humans and animals challenged accepted socio-cultural norms and was therefore viewed with suspicion. Indeed, pet ownership was often the only ‘evidence’ in the trials of the alleged witches for example, so some pet owners literally risked their lives by engaging in non-utilitarian cross-species relationships (see Serpell, 2002a). Throughout the same period, however, pet keeping was also an accepted preserve of social elites, and therefore demarcated status, wealth and privilege. 100First, structural functionalism fails to acknowledge that some social elites may have chosen to keep pets for a whole host of other reasons other than simply because they could, or because to do so differentiated them from the hoi polio. Second, structural-functionalism does not account for the numerous individuals from the lower echelons of society who chose to keep pets despite the many difficulties such an activity presented for them. Indeed, even in the contemporary world humans often opt to keep pets where the relationship may appear to make their lives more complicated. For example, large numbers of homeless individuals prefer to stay on the streets than relinquish their canine companions (see for example, Burley, 2008: 16; Singer et al., 1995). Elderly people are also less likely to seek medical care when they need it for fear that they will be hospitalized and forced to give up their pets (McNicholas et al., 2005). Such dogged determination to maintain a relationship with a pet animal, even when it places the human owner at risk, has traditionally been dismissed as irrational or self-harming behaviour. However the therapeutic properties of pets, and the psychological support which socially isolated people can obtain from the non-judgemental and constant companionship of an animal, are increasingly being recognized. 101Commodity fetishism is a state of socio-economic relations characteristic of capitalist systems which predominate in post-domestic societies. In the capitalist market the value of social relations is influenced by the perceived values of commodities, but this value often rests on the symbolic qualities that ‘things’ are thought to possess. Commodity fetishism is typically engaged with by scholars looking at the impact of capitalism outside of the developed world. 104Taussig discussed the development of a belief that workers who brought into the capitalist system had entered pacts with the devil in a bid to increase production and therefore income. However, Taussig observed that it was only when workers were proletarianized (i.e. alienated from the actual products of their labour) that the devil assumed importance. When working their own land or working for their own subsistence they did not invoke the devil. Taussig noted the widespread belief that, while it brought material wealth, the devil contract has undesirable consequences and contracted workers would die a premature and painful death.
Animals imbued with symbolic value become commodities in contexts where individuals are alienated from processes of production, because they can be used for financial gain (to breed more animals to be sold, for example). But what of the large numbers of pets who are viewed as commodities and status symbols by their owners, but who do not actually yield any monetary profit? Pets might also be regarded as commodities when they generate social profit for their owners (see for example, Horst and Miller, 2006; Miller, 2001, 2008 for discussions of material culture in relation to status, identity, and changing socio-economic relations.) 105Humans living and working within the confines of other economic systems pursue fetishes (such as fertility or cattle), but outside a capitalist context these are not necessarily related to financial gain. The nature of the relationship then bears some correlation to the dominant mode of subsistence, a variation on the theme of Marshall Sahlins’ aphorism that ‘money [and commodities] is to the West what kinship is to the rest’ (1979: 216). 105The transient nature of some human-pet relationships has been theorized by many scholars on the grounds of control and dominance. Pets are dependent on their owners or carers for food, water, exercise, companionship and so on. Philosopher Yi-Fu Tuan (1984) has forcefully argued that pets fulfil the innate human desire to be needed and this, coupled with the element of control that responsibility for a dependent brings, accounts for the ubiquity of pet keeping in the modern world and the high incidence of pets being abandoned or killed when that desire either wanes or becomes difficult to enact in practice. 107Anthropologists have prioritized language as the dominant form of communication because of the widespread belief that ‘language expresses cultural reality… language embodies cultural reality … [and] language symbolizes cultural reality’ (Kramsch, 2008: 3). In other words, humans use language, the meaning of which is shared by other humans, to convey information. They use language to create and convey their experiences and emotions to other humans and they imbue things with value, creating a symbolic language of signs. So, ‘culture’, that marker of humanness and of intra-human difference, is rooted in language. Language has also often been considered a prerequisite for thought. 112Biological archaeologist Robin Dunbar has argued that human language and the capacity for symbolic thought had particular evolutionary advantages, enabling our primate ancestors ‘to form long-lasting, tightly bonded coalitions’ (1996: 68) through ‘a kind of vocal grooming [gossip] to … bong larger groups than was possible using the conventional primate mechanism of physical grooming’ (1996: 78). That may have been the case, but grooming is just one of the many ways in which primates communicate with each other. When discussing the suitability of baboons as models for human evolution Cheney and Seyfarth (2007: 251) state that while baboons communicate with each other and other species, they are incapable of language per se. This is a controversial point because baboons have perceptive and cognitive abilities which show continuity with human language. Moreover, baboons are capable of forming complex mental representations (see for example, Noser and Byrne, 2007). As a result, when many other species of animal are denied language, what they actually seem to lac is spoken language and the ability to use abstract or symbolic signs (words) in almost infinite combinations to convey meaning about things, events and experiences which are not confined to the here and now. 114Despite certain limitations, the increasing popularity of NH is symptomatic of a paradigm shift in attitudes towards animals, and domesticated animals in particular, within a post-domestic setting. While it is often dismissed as anthropomorphism, the genuine desire to read, understand and respond appropriately to the needs of the animals in their care is a driving motivator for many humans. 117The previous chapter was concerned with pet keeping and all of the ‘explanations’ given focussed almost exclusively on the human perspectives. It is obviously much easier to ascertain what humans gain from these interactions and relationships because researchers can ask them, or draw on their own experiences. However, the move towards ‘bringing in the animal’, which is gaining momentum across social sciences, necessitates the recognition of animals as active subjects in (but also frequently victims of) relationships with humans, and the attempt to give these muted individuals a voice. 120As Levi-Strauss noted, animals are convenient symbols for humans because they are ‘good to think’ (1963). In other words, humans are able to communicate important messages about themselves through animals, provided that the recipients of those messages share the same semiotic understanding of system of classification. In the process of ‘standing in’ for humans, animal ‘objects’ can also become active subjects with the capacity to impact on the relationships between the humans involved, leading some researchers to refer to these multi-species interactions as ‘intersubjective’. While such assertions are typically grounded in ethnographic data, researchers seldom discuss the long-standing philosophical debates on intersubjectivity, nor the implications of intersubjectivity for anthropological studies of humans and animals. 125Intersubjectivity is an integral aspect of the philosophical movement known as phenomenology, which has a long history within philosophy and the social sciences more generally. 126However, as Cohen and Rapport note, ‘Western social thought is built upon the Cartesian notion of self-consciousness (as expressed in the cogito) as the distinguishing characteristic of humanity’ (1995: 1, emphasis added). Such a view is received anthropological wisdom and yet many researchers who work closely with other animals find the experience tells them otherwise. 126On the one hand, the recognition that ‘any mind beyond the ethnographer’s own is other an requires to have interpretive work done on it’ (Cohen, 1986) means that anthropologists can no longer make sweeping generalizations about what it means to be a member of a particular culture or society because all humans are unique. On the other, the diversity of individual human perception of the world means that anthropologists need now, more than ever, to empathize, emphasis on the empathy, on accepting that we can never really know what is going on inside the mind of anotherm but recognizing that sometimes we can make a pretty good guess, should enable anthropologists to think seriously about the possibility of human-animal intersubjectivity, an activity which, in the past, would have been dismissed as mere anthropomorphic projection. However, intersubjectivity still requires the acceptance of ‘mindedness’ in the nonhuman other. 129Perhaps the most conclusive evidence for other animals having ‘self-consciousness’ and the ability to empathize comes from research into ‘pointing’. An animal’s ability to recognize the significance of a pointing gesture of another provides a pretty clear indication that not only are they self-aware, but that they can recognize that the ‘other’ who is doing the pointing is also self-aware (White, 2007: 68-9). For example, if individuals look at what it is the other is pointing at rather than the tip of the pointing finger, then they are showing what cognitive psychologists call ‘theory of mind’. Some animals, such as certain primates, dogs and corvids (for example crows and ravens), that this to another level and follow the eye gaze of others. 131Indeed, Duranti argues that, from a Husserlian perspective, ‘intersubjectivity is more than a shared or mutual understanding and is closer to the notion of the possibility of being in the place where the Other is’ (2010: 1, emphasis added). 136There is an increasing body of ethological material which convincingly argues for the ability of numerous animals to empathize not just with members of their own species, but with members of other species. While there is also plenty of evidence to suggest that many animals do not demonstrate empathy, the same could be said of humans. That they don’t always empathize or demonstrate empathetic engagement is a very different issue to whether they are able to empathize. 137In India, 86-88 percent of the Rhesus macaque (Mucaca mulatta) population lives in commensal or semi-commensal settings with humans. Moreover this perceived need to separate humans from all that is natural completely disregards our shared evolutionary history and is based on the outdated misapprehension that humans, by dint of their ‘culture’, are no longer part of nature. 145‘Science’ is often presented in public discourse as a marker of ‘progress’. In contemporary academia we are currently experiencing the withdrawal of funding from the arts, humanities and ‘social sciences’ in favour of STEAM subjects (‘hard’ or ‘natural’ science technology, engineering and maths). Driving these funding decision is the assumption that science provides the key to solving the world’s problems. Yet, as anthropologists were only too aware, ‘scientific knowledge’ is not absolute. There are a myriad of ways of ‘knowing’ the world and ‘science’ is just one of them. The prioritizing of one system of knowledge over others is, to some extent, ethnocentric and can mean that important ‘folk’ knowledge is overlooked because it is viewed as ‘inferior’. 151The fact that scientists need to overcome anthropomorphism suggests that identifying with other animals is something which occurs to us as ‘natural’ or is ‘inbuilt’. This argument has been advanced by numerous scholars who have written on anthropomorphism (for example, Kennedy, 1992). The animistic beliefs of many people around the world have been classified as anthropomorphic by anthropologists and there is a school of thought in cognitive psychology (the Piagetian framework) which has suggested that anthropomorphism is an innate human characteristic which is subdued within certain cultural concepts. 154In socio-cultural and environmental contexts where humans recognize their ‘place’ within a complex ecosystem, it is easier to see how the different elements of that ecosystem work and interrelate. In post-domesticity, where connections between individuals and the systems which sustain them are severed, some humans and human institutions (such as allopathic medicine) have apparently lost that sense of the bigger picture. 161While some anthropologists are now rightly critical of considering animals exclusively as metaphors, the reality remains that for many anthropologists and their informants animals are still good to think. 183One theme which consistently recurs through all of the literature however, is ‘belonging’. The participation in a collective act provides comfort in a world of alienation (for example, Bronner, 2004, 2008), while the ability to ‘outwit’ or out-perform a nonhuman opponent provides some sense of control (as per the large body of anthropological and sociological material on risk-taking more generally, see, for example, Douglas and Wildavsky, 2983; Lupton, 2006; Lyng, 2005). 187In the contemporary world, animals are subjected to innumerable acts of culturally and legally sanctioned violence. These ‘harms’ range from the enrolment of millions of animals in intensive agricultural systems and vivisection, to mass extinctions and a result of anthropogenic activities. Many animals (human and nonhuman alike) are also harmed or become victims of violence illegally, as a result of neglect or wanton cruelty of individuals or groups.
The root causes of cruelty towards animals in particular are difficult to identify (although there is a recognized link between cruelty to animals and cruelty to humans, for example, Arluke et al., 1999). However acts of abuse, cruelty or violence are often the result of psychological dissonance. Acts of violence towards animals are also recognized as responses of individuals who have themselves been victims of abuse and/or alienation. 191In his treatise In defence of dolphins, for example, philosopher Thomas White (2007) synthesizes a range of published literature on the behavioural characteristics of dolphins and concludes that dolphins are inherently sexual beings to the extent that sex constitutes a ‘social glue’ (see also Norris, 1991). White also asserts that dolphins are ‘bi-sexual’. While dolphins’ social idiom may well be sexual, classifying them as ‘bi-sexual’ is problematic because it is essentially anthropomorphic. In other words, it attributes human categories to animal who do not share them. Dolphins, like many other animals, do not have the same cultural baggage about sex that many human groups have constructed; they are not ‘heterosexual’ or ‘homosexual’ or ‘bi-sexual’: they just ‘are’. In many respects, the recent contributions in the field of ‘queer theory’ which argue for the plasticity of human sexuality are moving our understanding of human sexuality away from constructivist categorizing. 201‘Bringing in’ animals to ethnographic fieldwork and anthropological theory raises several complex issues. If anthropologists consider both the human and nonhuman aspects of human-animal interactions, interactions which are frequently based on inequalities, whose ‘voice’ or experience should take priority? And what should be done in situations where animals might be ‘suffering’ unduly as a result of their enrolment in human social lives? Aside from these pressing questions of loyalties and advocacy, there are other more practical issues concerning the appropriate methodological and theoretical approaches to adopt when conducting what has come to be reffered to as ‘multi-species ethnography’ (Kirksey and Helmreich, 2010a) 203Primatologist Richard Wrangham sums up the flaws of human exceptionalism by considering how the situation might appear to a delegation of Martian biologists sent to assess the state of human, but especially anthropological knowledge at the start of the 21st century:They might congratulate us on recognizing our morphological and evolutionary proximity to apes, but wouldn’t they wonder at the persisting anthropocentricity that so often causes a false dichotomy between us and our cousins? As interplanetary biologists, they would puzzle at the widespread notion that behaviour which varies across human populations can’t have been influenced by genes, unlike other animals; or at the fact that even through primatology’s raison deter is to shed light on humanity, most comparative primate studies exclude data on humans. Looking at the range of earth’s species and their many differences, they would surely be startled that conventional anthropological wisdom often deems human social structure infinitely variable, whereas all other species are granted their typical social forms. Nothing the human pervasiveness of fission-fusion grouping and male-bonded communities, patriarchy and war – a combination strikingly similar to traits among chimpanzees – they would be surprised that we don’t yet have a unified theory of ape and human social evolution. And surely, they would lament a species that allows its nearest relatives to slide into extinction without a determined howl at the tragedy of the loss. (1987: 445) 204Humans are amazingly effective adaptors and, as induviduals and as a species, we have made some truly exceptional achievements. However, the sort of human exceptionalism on which anthropology and many other human ontologies are based can no longer be justified. It is, according to Haraway. ‘foolish’ to think otherwise (2008: 244). Just as postcolonialism forced anthropologists to see the error of their (or rather their forebears) ethnocentricity, so post-humanism has enabled us to see that humans are just one species among many whose lives are inextricably linked and mutually dependent. Human exceptionalism or ‘species solipsism’ (Midgley, 1994a, 1994b) becomes exposed when we are confronted with the equally exceptional, but exceptionally different lives of other animals. 205Across India, vultures are dying because cattle carcasses they consume are contaminated with high residual levels of anti-inflammatory drugs. Anti-inflammatories are routinely administered to cattle to ensure they remain as productive as they can be for as long as possible. This makes treated cattle more comfortable, and ensures that humans on the poverty line are able to get every last drop of milk or labour out of their invaluable animals. For the vultures however, it means a lingering and unpleasant death, and, as vulture numbers decline, there is a proportionate increase in the population of feral dogs. Dogs are less efficient at cleaning carcasses than vultures. While vultures strip a carcass clean, dogs leave putrefying flesh behind where pathogens such as Anthrax can spore. Growing dog populations also lead to higher incidence of attacks against humans and domestic animals.
There are economic and cultural implications too. For example, fewer vultures mean that Parsi communities, who practice a form of sky burial, are left with extreme difficulty in disposing of the bodies of their dead, resulting in considerable cognitive and social dissonance, not to mention public health risks. In describing such an array of consequences arising from the death of vultures van Dooren draws us into the holistic ‘biosocial world of entangled lives and deaths’ of which we are all a part. 205King’s point is an important one; that human characteristics are what makes other animals ‘worthy’ of consideration and conservation. This anthropooometric approach is not only misguided however, but also harmful. Rather than recognizing nonhumans as ‘special’ in their own right, the emphasis on humans as the marker against which other species are measured means that, more often than not, they are found wanting. 206Milton (2005: 266) suggests that anthropomorphism is in fact a distancing device employed by people who believe that the characteristics they attribute to animals are in fact the unique preserve of humans. As an alternative, Milton proposes ‘egomorphism’, or the recognition of personhood in other animals on the basis of our ability to understand things by perceiving characteristics in them. This perceptive ability is contingent on our own experiences and world view. So, for example, farmers who make their living raising large numbers of sheep for slaughter have no desire to understand how an individual sheep ‘really’ feels, because the act of perceiving emotions and consciousness in sheep would result in serious cognitive dissonance for the farmer. Amazonian hunters on the other hand recognize jaguars (Panthera onca) as intentional persons and seek to understand them because they have a great deal to lose if they misjudge these physically and spiritually powerful induviduals (Fausto, 1999, 2008; Kohn, 2007) 211While well-meaning, such a movement nonetheless resembles a return to the postcolonial critiques of advocacy and it is here that the animal turn differs from preceding and revisionist approaches to anthropological knowledge and practice While they have been ‘muted’, alienated and oppressed in many respects, groups, including women, children, the elderly, indigenous people, ‘gay’ people or people ‘of colour’ can speak for themselves when given the chance. Notwithstanding the few apes who have mastered human sign language (but who still rely on humans to interpret what they are saying), there is always going to be a need for someone to ‘speak for’ the animal persons on a political or legal stage. 213For many years critics of homosexuality have claimed that same-sex acts are ‘unnatural’ because homosexuality does not exist in ‘nature’, that is, outside of the human species (Corvino, 1997: 5, 141). Such assertions have been convincingly overturned however by the vast body of recent material which same-sex sexual activity in numerous animal species. Admittedly sexual activity does not equal sexuality, nonetheless these empirical developments support the notion of human-animal continuity; perhaps more importantly they highlight the importance of reflexive inter- and multi-disciplinary theoretical exchange when considering human-animal interactions. It is important to acknowledge these developments, as well as to bear in mind that the essentialist rendering ‘that animals are queer so then queerness is natural’ (Hayward, 2010) oversimplifies things.
What is perhaps more significant is the fact that ethological material about the ‘polymorphous’ sexual lives of other species presents culturally rooted ideas about ‘normality’ more generally. Given the ‘normative’ ideas about humans and other animals in many post-domestic contexts revolve around the humanist notion of human exceptionalism ‘queering’ the nonhuman as well as the human allows for other ways of being to be acknowledged as exceptional in their own right, as collective (species) and as individuals. 217One final point to be made ties together many of the themes raised in the preceding chapters. Koho uses the term ‘cosmological autism’ to refer to the occasional loss of Runa ‘souls’ which otherwise enable them to see the subjectivity of other ‘persons’ in the forest. Autism as a medical term ‘refers to a state of isolation that is a result of cognitive difficulties in treating other people as intentional beings’ (Kohn, 2007: 9), and so following Kohn I would suggest that many anthropologists and indeed post-domestic induviduals to date have exhibited ‘zoological autism’ in their inability to recognize the ‘personhood’ of some nonhuman others. ‘Bringing in’ the animal does not equate to ‘putting out’ the human (Wolfe, 2009). On the contrary, post-humanism encapsulated in the emergent flow of a holistic multi-species ethnography might present a way to ‘save the human’. 220
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