|
Animal
Domestication in Geographic Perspective
Kay Anderson
1
University of New South Wales
What, exactly, makes humans human? A
close look at nonhuman animal domestication practices reveals
how people came to view their own uniqueness in western cultural
process. The study of domestication across time shows the
multiple human impulses underlying acts of animal enclosure and
domestication. Animals can be beloved companions or eaten for a
meal. These impulses involve contradictory moralities -- a rich
subject for inquiries into the dynamics of power and possession,
at scales ranging from local to global.
Writings on human-nonhuman animal relations in western societies
commonly observe that animals are our ultimate Others (Birke &
Hubbard, 1995). In the moral order of self-other distinctions,
where each socially constructed identity depends on its opposite
for meaning, animality is said to be a pivotal condition
existing not only against, but beneath humanity (Ingold, 1994).
Animality is the final site of savagery and instinct, and
animals are said to be its living embodiment. We eat them, we
harness their labor, we cage them, we turn them into spectacles,
we use them to reference the "beastly" humans we despise. And
yet we also incorporate certain of them into our households as
honorary family members, perhaps attracted to the wildness we
have long since domesticated, even within ourselves.
The ambivalences run deep (Humphrey, 1995; Arluke & Sanders,
1996), upsetting neat models of mastery and oppression in
human-animal relations. Humans and animals have become
habituated to close coexistence. From companion animals to
animals living on farms, domestication has entailed sentiments
ranging from affection to domination. The ultimate intention of
this article is to release the study of domestication from its
moorings in evolutionist-functionalist models and supply
glimpses of its workings across diverse times and scales.
Animal Domestication: Comments From the Urban Zoo
Animal domestication is a complex practice that can be conceived
narrowly, in a technical sense, and broadly, in a metaphorical
sense. Elsewhere I developed the argument that urban zoos are
supremely domesticated social products that craft the means for
the popular experience of nature (Anderson, 1995; Mullan &
Marvin, 1987; Hoage & Deiss, 1996). Zoos are spaces through
which "nature" is transformed into "culture." Zoos are acts of
enclosure encoding what Haraway (1988) has called the "partial
perspective" of humans. However, the story of metropolitan zoos
in western societies, such as Australia, is not one of absolute
human control and coercion. Inside the walls of the zoo, there
are a range of experiences and representations of human-animal
relations, from interspecies proximity (in the petting or
children's zoo) as well as distance (inscribed by iron bars).
Many people, and not only children, visit zoos to experience
being "closer to animals." Domestication of the nonhuman other
is no simple act of appropriation -- it is filled with ambiguity
and tension.
Technically speaking, most zoo animals are not domesticated.
Individual animals such as elephants and monkeys can be tamed,
but only a species bred in captivity for many generations can be
considered domesticated in the strict sense of the term. These
are the farm animals in the children’s corner of zoos such as
goats, sheep, cows, horses, pigs and rabbits. Along with the
other major domesticated species of chickens, dogs, cats, mice,
rats, camels, turkeys, bees, and silkworms, they are the
descendants of once wild species bred for characteristics valued
by humans and whose subsistence cycles have for milennia been
socially regulated. Over generations, the evolution of such
creatures was reorganised so that their "natural" state became
one of coexistence with humans. They are living artifacts --
hybrids of culture and nature -- that have been brought into
socially embodied form.
If only some of the zoo’s inhabitants are domesticated in the
technical sense, all the zoos inhabitants are arguably
domesticated broadly speaking. This domestication process draws
the non-human into a nexus of human concern where animals and
humans become mutually accustomed to conditions and terms laid
out by humans; where that which is culturally defined as
nature’s "wildness" is brought in and nurtured in some guises,
exploited in other senses, mythologised and aestheticised in
still other forms of this complex cultural activity.
The intriguing mix of human impulses that reside within the
process of animal domestication recently prompted me to survey
the wide-ranging literatures on the subject. Those bodies of
scholarship, including those contributed by geographers, are
overwhelmingly devoted to the study of technical domestication.
The political and cultural inflections within the process beyond
the brute facts of breeding suggests, however, the need to
explore how animal domestication has been culturally understood
in western traditions. How was the turn to breeding and
harvesting entire species conceived in early writings on
domestication? What might the answers to such questions reveal
about the dynamics not only of certain human-animal
interactions, but also of the social will to power?
Animal Domestication: A View from Geography
The interspecies association known as domestication has been the
focus of long and enduring study by zoologists, biologists,
archaeologists, pre-historians, anthropologists, and geographers
(Clutton-Brock, 1981, 1989; Hemmer, 1990; Harris, 1996; Ucko &
Dimbleby, 1969; Wilson, 1988; Zeuner, 1963). As a pivotal event
in the development of food production, the domestication of
animals has figured prominently in histories of human settlement
and livelihood, as well as regional demographies of population
growth and migration. Natural scientists, on the other hand,
have been more concerned with matters of species and behavioral
change under practices of social selection. The impact of
domestication on the world's physical environments has also been
a major focus for scientific analysis.
Despite the volume of literature on animal domestication,
however, debate continues to this day about its origins. There
is argument about whether domestication must be understood as a
rational decision of humans, or is best modelled as part of
evolution. The conventional wisdom that domestication was wholly
directed by humans has recently been criticized by neo-Darwinist
scholars wishing to conceptualize the relationship between
humans and (nonhuman) animals in more mutual, consensual terms.
Budiansky (1995), for example, has claimed that certain animals
chose domestication in the interests of species survival, while
in a similar vein, others note that humans do not have a
monopoly on domesticatory relations. Ants, for example,
"domesticate" aphids (O'Connor, 1997). Evolutionary challenges
to approaches that privilege human agency are thus mounting.
Cultural Geography and Domestication
Animal domestication has received a somewhat different treatment
and theorization within the literature of cultural geography.
Beginning with the pioneering work of Carl Sauer and his
Berkeley school students in the 1950s, geographers situated the
Neolithic turn to animal propagation within a trajectory of
cultural evolution (rather than the above-mentioned organic
evolution). In this endeavor, Sauer (1952/1969) drew on the work
of Darwin's contemporaries, including geologist Shaler, whose
influential 1896 publication was titled, Domesticated Animals:
Their Relation to Man and His Advancement in Civilisation. Given
its influence on later geographic work, it is worthy of some
attention.
Shaler (1896) argued that domestication of "forms of wilderness"
marked the moment of human beings' transition beyond "the
threshold of barbarism." It was an advance of culture, he
claimed, that separated people from animals. After all, the
process of domestication did not lie only with functional need
on the part of humans. Rather it derived from "aesthetic values"
and inclinations to bring "other beings into association with
our own lives." Here Shaler echoed the views of Darwin's cousin,
Galton (1865), who claimed that the major animal domesticates
had been initially bred in protective relationships as pets. The
"caretaking soil-tiller," in Shaler's words, had also acquired
"sympathetic tendencies" in the task of "husbanding" animals. It
followed for Shaler, then, that domestication was the work to
which "perhaps more than ... any other cause, we must attribute
the civilizable and the civilized state of mind" (1896, p. 222).
Related narrative assumptions structured Shaler's analysis. For
him, domestication was not only a mark of culture (conceived as
a civilizing attribute), it was the practice through which
culture had arisen. This enabled him to script the relations of
man and animal within a frame of culture's ascendancy and
evolution through stages. And yet, in a rather remarkable
contradiction, Shaler claimed that such "humanizing influences
due to the care of animals" were not universally shared by
people. The distinction between wild and tame was meaningless,
he observed, to "the savage." The work of domestication has "in
the main," Shaler stated, "been effected by our own Aryan race"
(1896, p. 220). In the continent of Africa, excepting the "lands
about the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, the native peoples have
never attained the stage of culture in which men become inclined
to subjugate wild animals" (1896, p. 247). Such men had
themselves, therefore, remained savage (Livingston, 1984). So
just as creatures acquired a "tone of civilization" when they "abandon[ed]
those ancient habits of fear and rage which were essential to
their life in the wilderness" (Shaler, 1896, p. 226), savage
people could only be brought into a "higher state of perfection"
under civilizing regimes.
Cultural Evolutionism
In 1955, an international symposium was convened under the chair
of Sauer of the University of California, Berkeley, to review
the impact on the earth's surface of "man's evolutionary
dominance" (Thomas, 1956, p. viii). The meeting grew out of
concern about the environmental impacts that were said to have
transpired since man "supplemented organic evolution with a new
method of change -- the development of culture." Sauer had
previously written about the origins and dispersal of
agriculture and was convener of the conference's retrospective
focus.
For Sauer (1952/1969), the evolution of culture in man had given
rise to innovations that -- in an intellectual context of
economic and environmental determinism in the discipline of
geography in the 1950s -- he wished to highlight. Echoing Shaler,
Thomas stated, "Man alone ate of the fruit of the Tree of
Knowledge and thereby began to acquire and transmit learning, or
culture" (1956, p. 2). In this sense, as for Shaler, culture was
conceived normatively and temporally as an attribute that had
arisen in conjunction with the development of man's rational
capacities. Unlike Shaler, however, Sauer saw no variation in
the capacity of races to select and harvest particular animals
(and plants). Certainly, he tolerated no assertions about the
special ability of Aryans to domesticate nonhuman species.
Sauer's theoretical objective, after all, was to vindicate
culture (above ecological factors) as the decisive force
transforming the earth's surface. Culture was a universal
capacity, he insisted, of "even the most primitive people,"
including "the obtuse Tasmanians" (Thomas, 1956, p. 11).
Sauer (1952/1969) followed the tradition of the German
geographer, Eduard Hahn, in his forays into the origins of
pastoralism and agriculture. Animals became domesticated, he
argued, less to supply food to growing populations (ecological
and economic factors), than to serve in the religious ceremonies
of more or less sedentary populations (cultural factors). Herd
animals, Sauer speculated, would have first been brought into
gentle protection and reared like children. Only subsequently
would people have experimented with breeding. Other animals
became part of people's households as pets, giving (again
following Shaler and Galton) aesthetic satisfaction to humans.
Nor were today's chickens initially domesticated for functional
(egg-laying and meat-producing) qualities, Sauer argued. Such
characteristics were selected for later, at least in Malaysia
and India, where originally animals were domesticated for ritual
reenactments of divine combat, as in cock-fighting. His
extensive empirical investigations of the religious bases of
domestication thus led Sauer to theorize the process as a
"cultural advance achieved only where people of special
inclination ... gave peculiar and sustained attention to the
care and propagation of certain plants and animals" (Sauer,
1952/1969, p. vii).
Unlike Shaler (who ended his book with an appeal for more
breeding experiments), Sauer was no uncritical advocate of the
process. Despite seeing domestication as an innovation
associated with the rise of man to ecological dominance, he
recognized in his paper for the 1955 symposium that flocks and
herds were progressively causing attrition of vegetative cover
and surface soils. It was time to "take stock" -- Sauer wrote in
words that again connected back to Shaler -- of the
"responsibilities and hazards of our prospects as lords of
creation" (Sauer, 1952/1969, p. 104). Armed with culture, humans
had singularly decoupled themselves from nature and thus been
set on a path to civilization. He was now duty-bound to heed the
negative consequences for his environments.
Lines and Linkages
Other geographers carried forward Sauer's line of work on animal
domestication. Notable were the Simoonses (1968) who wrote a
book about the ceremonial uses of the ox in India (Simoons,
1974), and Isaac, who in 1970, published Geography of
Domestication (Donkin, 1989; Palmieri, 1972). Isaac developed
the linkage between the domestication of cattle and religious
ideas with a view to unsettling reigning materialist
interpretations. After outlining a wealth of evidence of the
sacred status of bovine species in certain societies, he
concluded that domestication occurred in conjunction with "a
religious world picture" (Isaac, 1970, p. 110). It was a view
that enabled Isaac to (so he claimed) "reverse the popular
Marxist axiom that religion and science are superstructures. For
in this case, technology [domestication] was a superstructure on
... religious knowledge" (1970, p. 110). This idealist position
on the origins of domestication persists in key human geography
texts up to the present day (Rubenstein, 1989; Fellman, Getis, &
Getis, 1990).
A New Look at Animal Domestication
Recently, however, there have been dissenting views among
geographers. For example, Rodrigue (1992) refuted on empirical
grounds the Sauerian theory of animal domestication. She tested
the theory that the earliest animal domestications were brought
about through ritual sacrifice, using data from Near Eastern
sites for periods spanning the transition from Upper
Palaeolithic to Neolithic times. Her data led her to argue that
ritual sacrifice occurred in societies already possessing
domestic animals, as well as stored and traded food. She thus
claimed that "fragile, destabilizing human ecosystems" impelled
decisions to settle and to elevate long-domesticated stock into
spiritual herds (Rodrigue, 1992, p. 428). In so doing, she
rejected the emphasis of Sauerian geographers on "the causal
power of the human mind" (1992, p. 427).
Philosophical idealism in the work of the Berkeley school has
been subject to other, quite different, critiques by geographers
in recent years. Calling themselves "new cultural geographers,"
they have sought to break with Sauerian frameworks of
domestication and, more generally, of landscape form and change.
The leading exponent of this critique has been Duncan (1980) who
challenged the Sauerian model of culture and elaborated the
grounds for a revised view. The details of Duncan's critique
cannot be treated here (Jackson, 1989; Anderson & Gale, 1992),
but it is useful to note their specific implications for
Sauerian views of animal domestication. Not least relevant is
the causal power that Sauer gave to culture for the so-called
innovation of domestication. Certainly, there is a strong sense
running through Sauer's richly detailed work on pastoralism and
agriculture that culture is an entity functioning independently
of individuals. Such a superorganic concept was consistent with
his objective behind theorizing the origins of animal husbandry:
to unseat materialist perspectives in favor of those that
emphasized the force of culture in imprinting the face of the
earth. For Sauer, culture was an evolutionary attribute uniquely
acquired by Man -- recall that He "alone ate of ... the Tree of
Knowledge" (Thomas, 1956, p. 2). Only humans possessed a
rational soul, as testified by their inclination to use animals
for nonfunctional purposes as pets and symbolic bodies in acts
of ritual sacrifice.
Explain or Explain Away
It follows from these critical observations about the Berkeley
concept of culture that Sauer left unproblematized the learning
surrounding animal selection and breeding. Explanation for human
intervention in other species' reproduction and disposition was
implicitly handed over to forces that had put them at the apex
of life. In being content to explain or, more precisely, explain
away, animal sacrifice and breeding within a pre-given
evolutionary trajectory that bestowed culture on man, Sauer lost
the opportunity of contextualizing domestication within a
politics of premises surrounding human uniqueness.
If Sauer's school of domestication obscured the politics of
species alteration, so too has a growing body of neo-Darwinian
research. This work theorizes domestication within the frame of
organic evolution, one in which humans do not have privileged
status as Sauer would suggest, but rather are conceptualized
continuously with nonhuman animals in seeking to maximize their
species fitness. According to such work, domestication functions
to bring humans and other species into "co-evolutionary
relationships" that, in species-terms, are mutually beneficial
(Jackson, 1996). In contrast both to scientists for whom animal
domestication operated in tandem with organic evolutionary
forces, and cultural evolutionists like Sauer, for whom it
followed naturally from some higher stage of evolution called
culture, is an alternative perspective again. Newer models of
domestication are possible that problematize animal containment
strategies by humans within a cultural and political context.
More particularly, animal domestication can be historicized
within the set of remote ideas of "domus" and "agrios," and
oppositions of savagery and civility that are alive to the
present day.
Domesticating the Wild: A Narrative Triumph
The practice of selectively breeding animals was rooted in the
remote past, but the term "domestication" did not enter the
English language until the 1500s. The verb "to domesticate"
appears to be a technical term -- deriving from the French "domestiquer"
which in medieval times became attached to a concept that had
been circulating for centuries. We know that in the Greek
classical era, however, from approximately 500 BCE, to the Roman
period, 100 to 300 CE, domesticated animals were the reference
point for a split in thought between nature that was said to be
tame, in Cicero's words, that "we make," and nature that was
said to be "indomitable" (1894).
Characterizing the thought of any era is fraught with problems
of overgeneralization, but it is reasonable to conclude that the
opposition between made and unmade nature was no neutral
distinction for the ancients. From at least the time of Hesiod's
Works and Days in the 8th century BCE, human history was
conceived by many Greek scholars as a journey from the age when
people lived in (what was said to be) a "state of nature" (Glacken,
1967, pp. 132-133). For some authors, not least Hesiod, who
deplored the toils endured by farmers, the journey effectively
amounted to a fall from a golden age. By and large, however, the
practice of recasting life-forms for food, energy, warmth,
sport, company, and so on, came to be narrated positively as a
process of cultivating nature. To cultivate nature was to draw
it into a moral order where it became civilized. Indeed, it was
the practice that signified culture itself, a term, which, in
its earliest European use, meant to cultivate or tend something
-- usually crops and animals (Williams, 1983, p. 87).
Inversely, nature beyond the orbit of cultivation came to
signify a space of danger, death, and distance (Cosgrove, 1995).
Recall the walled city (polis) of the classical era that was
designed to keep out wildness (especially animals) and secure
the establishment of the ideal moral community (Pagden, 1982,
pp. 18-19). Such enclosures represented a systematic effort to
definitively segregate civility and wildness, both in thought
and practice. Later on, biblical stories invoked still more
negative notions of wilderness beyond the reach of cultivation
and civilization (Cronon, 1995).
The social archaeologist, Hodder (1990), provides a model that
historicizes still further these ancient concepts of civility
and wildness. He locates the cultural distinctions even more
remotely -- in the Neolithic era -- when humans were
experimenting with the breeding of bulls, sheep, and goats in
diverse parts of Europe. People were also erecting more stable
homes, settlements were becoming more definitively delimited,
and the dead (both human and nonhuman) were being buried and
segregated, all in ways, Hodder argues, that more securely
bounded the domestic from the wild. While acknowledging that the
full range of meanings within Neolithic symbolic systems cannot
be recovered, Hodder argued that space in many archaeological
sites throughout Europe in that period was structured around the
dramatic templates of domus (where life-sources such as plants,
animals, and clay were brought in and transformed) and agrios
(where danger and death were found). Hodder held that,
underlying such practices, were human impulses of both fear and
attraction to that which loosely bore the label of "wild."
Altering Relationships
It follows from Hodder's analysis that the alteration of the
relationship between humanity and other life-forms during the
Neolithic period -- called "agri-culture" -- was far broader
than a functional rise in the activities of herding and
harvesting (Thomas, 1991). It was a simultaneously practical and
symbolic process. Note particularly that the distinctions of
domus and agrios, inside and outside, are not pre-given in
Hodder's analysis, but rather are under constant construction,
experimentation, and negotiation as humans remake life sources
and life sources remake humans. By the late 5th and 4th
millennia BCE, Hodder claimed, the productive activities of
cooking, feasting, and exchange were couched within an ideology
of the domus where that which was figured as wild was
domesticated.
By the time of Greek writing, the capacity of humans to
domesticate entire species of animals had come to inform some
grand, forward-thrusting narratives. Yoking the ox to the
plough, for example, was being scripted as the very process out
of which civilization had evolved. Indeed, the activity of
domesticating animals was, for many Greek scholars (especially
the Stoics), the very justification of a claim to human
uniqueness (Sorabji, 1993). The logic went as follows: Whereas
humans (endnote 2) could control their instincts through
thought, nonhuman animals were, by contrast, locked in the
tyranny of instinct, unable to "realize their potential" (cited
in Pagden, 1982, pp. 17-18; Aristotle, 1976).
Of course, the animal world provided a reference point for human
boundary-making efforts in a range of ancient civilizations long
before experiments in breeding (Dell, in press). But breeding
and harvesting were taken as decisive because (unlike hunting)
such activities were said to involve the systematic use of
reason. Selective breeding vindicated the telos that was
inherent within humans, enabling them to gloriously transcend
the primal struggle for survival. By contrast, animals were
stuck. They were lodged, not only in their own nature, but in
that residual sphere called "nature" that was somehow left over
and behind after humans, or at least Man, had heroically
detached himself.
Such was the avowed triumph of the taming of nature that, in
time, the process became more widely extrapolated in Christian
theorizations of human identity (Sorabji, 1993). Just as humans
regulated animal savagery in the ascent to domestication, so did
Man become (what was said to be) civilized by raising himself
above his own internal primal urges. He was released from the
grip of instinct, from his own animal nature. He was never
entirely free, however, and by the 18th century in England and
elsewhere, the prevailing conception of human identity depicted
a self split between animal and human sides (Ingold, 1994, p.
22). Here was foreshadowed the notion of "the beast within" --
that metaphorical site that to this day, in western cultures,
signifies all the contradictory fears and desires surrounding
uninhibited behavior including sex and violence (Midgley, 1978).
European ideas of animality have had a complex history since the
ancient era, not least during medieval times when premises about
the integrity of the human-animal boundary became less
confident. In time, however, the divide of human and animal
became so taken for granted in western science and thought that
the reality of species-specific diversity grew obscure. The
processes embedded in the construction of Animal as a category
distinct from Human became progressively lost to conscious
reflection even beyond the time of the publication of Darwin's
path-breaking Origin of Species in 1859.
The connections drawn here between practices of animal husbandry
and ideas of human uniqueness are being charted as part of a
strategy of retrieval well underway in a range of human sciences
(Noske, 1989; Birke, 1995; Plumwood, 1993). The activities that
gave humans control over the reproduction and character of other
life-forms were nested within binary and temporal rhetorics of
reason and instinct. These logics pitted animals apart from and
beneath humans. Selective breeding and harvesting thus assumed a
wider, metaphorical dimension in Judeo-Christian thought,
holding up a mirror to anxieties within human self-definition.
Changing Scale: The Wild in the City
Drawing wildness into a nexus of human concern is an inherently
spatial process. It implies a physical infrastructure of
enclosure practices, as well as concepts of bounding, fixing,
and arranging that rely on spatialized thought. Such
boundary-making efforts have been fraught with contradiction and
tension, however, as a look at the narrative history of animal
domestication shows. As Hodder (1990) flagged, and the notion of
the "beast within" captures, humans are attracted to wildness as
they engage in acts of enclosing, repressing, and recasting it.
The practice of bringing wildness into the human domus has been
underpinned by impulses not only of fear and control, but also
of care and curiosity -- by affection as well as domination
(Tuan, 1984).
The ambiguities are precisely what make the representational
devices at such familiar institutions as the urban zoo more
complex than a series of rationalist frames of viewing. This is
not to imply that some overarching continuity of domesticatory
relations has flowed from Neolithic Europe into the spaces and
places of contemporary cities. Nothing so transhistorical,
linear, abstract, or impregnable in scope is proposed. Rather,
returning to the local spaces through which domesticatory
practices are articulated, registers the point that animal life
is brought into close encounter with humans in diverse ways,
through particular spatial arrangements, and in specific times
and places. The manifestly varied faces of domestication require
their own detailed geo-histories.
If the menageries of ancient Greece and Egypt saw efforts to
technically domesticate new species of animals (Hoage, Roskell &
Mansour, 1996), the zoo of the modern era is an exercise in
metaphorical domestication. Inside the walls of those
institutions that call themselves zoos after Regent's Park in
London in 1840, select animals are brought into encounter with
humans as objects of curiosity, education, and entertainment --
as resources within a nature aesthetic for urban consumption.
Adelaide Zoo
In the case of the colonial institution of Adelaide Zoo in South
Australia, the decisions of the officers of the Royal Zoological
Society regarding animal composition and display hold up a
window to such representational strategies. The decisive
influences included an imperial network of animal trading that,
for the first 40 years of the zoo's career, saw exotic icons of
colonial mastery brought from abroad. Also instrumental in
shaping the zoo's design philosophy was the mix of late
19th-century ideas surrounding race, gender, and empire, such
that the likes of Lilian, the elephant (and her long line of
female successors) stood doubly as racialized subjects and
mother figures for children. The animals were also recast as
exhibits according to the dictates of consumer capitalism over
the 20th century that brought circuses and other entertainments
inside the walls of Adelaide Zoo.
Science too had a role in transforming the animals into
spectacles. From the era of Linnean taxonomy (with displays
accompanied by maps of the global distribution of species) to
contemporary biodiversity discourses of loss and extinction,
animal bodies have been interpreted through the lens of
scientific knowledges. The rise of nationalism saw the addition
of an "Australiana" exhibit in the 1960s. Earlier in the
century, there had been a flow of koalas, kangaroos, wombats,
and other national icons to overseas zoos). Finally, shifting
design languages in western society at large -- from modernist
iron bars to the postmodern "World of Primates" where wildness
has been invented from scratch -- have conditioned the form of
the wildness aesthetic at the heart of the city of Adelaide.
Enclosing the Other
The changing visual technologies at the Adelaide Zoo, from
menagerie-style caging to the ecological theaters of the present
day, reveal that institution's nesting within contexts of
empire, consumer capitalism, and nationalism (among others). It
does not necessarily follow, however, that the story of that zoo
can be read as a tidy tale of human (and British colonial)
dominion. In bringing in wildness, zoos replay a will to control
the Other, at the same time as there is an attraction to it. At
Adelaide, in the 1930s, children came into close contact with
animal bodies when they took rides on Lilian's back, while they
(and their parents) laughed at the antics of monkeys in the
demeaning chimpanzee circus (Figures 1 and 2). In this sense,
the zoo is a microcosm of the complex modalities of power and
allure within the more general process of domestication.
[Figures 1 and 2]
Conclusion
One of the most persistent themes within western thought has
been the concern with what makes us human -- an impulse that has
seen numerous efforts to specify how we are different from
animals. Animal domestication has figured prominently among such
efforts -- a claim substantiated here by historicizing
domestication practices within a narrative politics of ideas
about human uniqueness, wildness, and civility. Such a review
presents a more activated model of domestication than has
existed in past and present functionalist-evolutionist
theorizations. The multiple human impulses that underlie acts of
animal enclosure involve not only a politics of difference,
however. They also contain contradictory moralities, making
animal domestication a rich subject for inquiries into the
dynamics of power and possession, at scales ranging from local
to global.
References
Anderson, K. (1997). A walk on the wild side: A critical
geography of domestication. Progress in Human Geography, 21(4),
463-485.
Anderson, K. (1995). Culture and nature at the Adelaide Zoo: At
the frontiers of "human" geography. Transactions, Institute of
British Geographer NS, 20, 275-284.
Anderson, K. & Gale, F. (Eds.). (1992). Inventing places:
Studies in cultural geography. Melbourne: Longman.
Aristotle. (1976). How humans differ from other creatures. In T.
Regan & P. Singer, (Eds.), Animal rights and human obligations.
Englewood Cliffs NJ: Prentice Hall.
Arluke, A. & Sanders, C. (1996). Regarding animals: Animals,
culture and society. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Birke, L. (1995). Feminism, animals and science: The naming of
the shrew. Buckingham: Open University Press.
Birke, L. & Hubbard, R. (Eds.). (1995). Reinventing biology.
Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
Budiansky, S. (1995). The covenant of the wild: Why animals
chose domestication. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
Cicero. (1894). Tusculan disputations: Also treaties on the
nature of the gods and on the commonwealth (trans. C. Yonge).
New York: Harper & Bros.
Clutton-Brock, J. (Ed.). (1989). The walking larder: Patterns of
domestication, pastoralism and predation. London: Unwin Hyman.
Clutton-Brock, J. (1981). Domesticated animals from early times.
Austin: University of Texas Press.
Cosgrove, D. (1995). Habitable earth: Wilderness, empire, and
race in America. In D. Rathenberg (Ed.), Wild ideas. Minnesota:
University of Minnesota Press.
Cronon, W. (Ed.).(1995). Uncommon ground: Towards reinventing
nature. New York: W.W. Norton.
Dell, K. (in press). Animal imagery in the psalms and wisdom
literature of ancient Israel. In A. Linzey (Ed.), Animals on the
agenda: Questions about animals for theology and ethics.
Donkin, R. (1989). The Muscovy Duck, Cairina moschata domestica:
Origins, dispersal and associated aspects of the geography of
domestication. Rotterdam: A. A. Balkema.
Duncan, J. (1980). The superorganic in American cultural
geography. Annals of the Association of American Geographers,
70, 181-198.
Fellman, J., Getis, A., & Getis, J. (1990). Human geography:
Landscapes of human activities. Dubuque: William C. Brown.
Galton, F. (1865). The first steps towards the domestication of
animals. Transactions of the Ethnological Society of London NS,
3, 122-138 (reprinted from Inquiries into human faculty, pp. ,
by , 1907, London: Dent).
Glacken, C. (1967). Traces on the Rhodian shore. Berkeley:
University of California Press.
Haraway, D. (1988). Situated knowledges: The science question in
feminism and the privilege of partial perspective. Feminist
Studies, 14(3), 575-599.
Harris, D. (1996). Domesticatory relationships of people, plants
and animals. In R. Ellen & F. Katsuyoshi (Eds.), Redefining
nature: Ecology, culture and domestication (pp. 437-466).
Oxford: Berg.
Hemmer, H. (1990). Domestication: the decline of environmental
appreciation (N. Beckhaus, Trans.). Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Hoage, R. & Deiss, W. (Eds.). (1996). New worlds, new animals:
From menagerie to zoological park in the nineteenth century.
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Hoage, R., Roskell, A., & Mansour, J. (1996). Menageries and
zoos to 1900. In R. Hoage & W. Deiss, (Eds.), New worlds, new
animals: From menagerie to zoological park in the Nineteenth
Century, pp. 8-18.Hodder, I. (1990). The domestication of
Europe: Structure and contingency in Neolithic societies.
Oxford: Blackwell.
Humphrey, N. (1995). Histories: In the company of animals.
Social Research, 62(3), 477.
Ingold, T. (1994). Humanity and animality. In T. Ingold (Ed.),
Companion encyclopedia of anthropology (pp. 14-32). London and
New York: Routledge.
Isaac, E. (1970). Geography of domestication. Englewood Cliffs:
Prentice Hall.
Jackson, F. (1996). The coevolutionary relationship of humans
and domesticated plants. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology,
Annual, 39, 161-176.
Jackson, P. (1989). Maps of meaning. London: Unwin Hyman.
Livingstone, D. (1984). Science and society: Nathaniel S. Shaler
and racial ideology. Transactions, Institute of British
Geographers NS, 9, 181-210.
Midgley, M. (1978). Beast and man: The roots of human nature.
Brighton: Harvester Press.
Mullan, B. & Marvin, G. (1987). Zoo culture. London: Weidenfield
and Nicolson.
Noske, B. (1989). Humans and other animals: Beyond the
boundaries of anthropology. London: Pluto Press.
O'Connor, T. (1997). Working at relationships: Another look at
animal domestication. Antiquity, 71, 149-156.
Pagden, A. (1982). The fall of natural man: The American Indian
and the origins of comparative ethnology. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Palmieri, R. (1972). The domestication, exploitation and social
functions of the yak in Tibet and adjoining areas. Proceedings
of the Association of American Geographers, 4, 8-83.
Plumwood, V. (1993). Feminism and the mastery of nature. London:
Routledge.
Rodrigue, C. (1992). Can religion account for early animal
domestication? A critical assessment of the cultural geographic
argument, based on near eastern archaeological data.
Professional Geographer, 44, 417-430.
Rose, G. (1993). Feminism and geography: The limits of
geographical knowledge. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Rubenstein, J. (1989). The cultural landscape: An introduction
to human geography. Columbus: Merrill Press.
Sauer, C. (1952/1969). Seeds, spades, hearths and herds. (2nd
ed. of Agricultural origins and dispersals.). Cambridge and
London: MIT Press.
Shaler, N. (1896). Domesticated animals: Their relation to man
and his advancement in civilisation. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Simoons, F. (1974). Contemporary research themes in the cultural
geography of domesticated animals. Geographical Review, 64,
557-576.
Simoons, F. & Simoons, E. (1968). A ceremonial ox of India.
Madison, Milwaukee, and London: University of Wisconsin Press.
Sorabji, R. (1993). Animal minds and human morals: The origins
of the Western debate. New York: Cornell University Press.
Thomas, J. (1991). Rethinking the Neolithic. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Thomas, W. L. (Ed.). (1956). Man's role in changing the face of
the earth. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Tuan, Y-F. (1984). Dominance and affection: The making of pets.
New Haven and London: Yale University Press.
Ucko, P. & Dimbleby, G. (Eds.). (1969). The domestication and
exploitation of plants and animals. London: Duckworth.
Williams, R. (1983). Key words. London: Fontana.
Wilson, P. (1988). The domestication of the human species. New
Haven: Yale University Press.
Zeuner, F. (1963). A history of domesticated animals. London:
Hutchinson.
Notes
1. All Correspondence should be sent to Kay Anderson, School of
Geography & Oceanography, University College, University of New
South Wales, Canberra, Australia 2600.
2. In this article, I resist the temptation to correct the male
voice because the falsely universalist premises of the time --
of man as culture and reason -- were logically crucial to the
narratives I am interrogating. Such a manoeuvre on my part is
only possible given the persuasive feminist and antiracist
critiques of universalist truth-claims, subject positions, and
subjectivities (see Rose, 1993; Plumwood, 1993). Where the term
"man" was granted especially transcendent inflections by Shaler
and other authors, I capitalize it, along with its corollaries
Culture, Reason, and Progress.
3. Although domestication reshaped the biology and disposition
of animals, and doubtless contributed to the species fitness of
humans by affording them food, I resist the tendency to impute a
necessity and inevitability to the process (e.g., Aborigines did
not domesticate other species prior to European settlement in
Australia). My difficulties with evolutionary theories have to
do with their non-falsifiability, as well as their invocation of
forces that collapse human agency into an explanatory scheme
that, in effect, depoliticizes it.
For Abstracts of all issues, including the most current, click
Article
Abstracts
To order Society &
Animals Journal, go to our secure online
ordering page
You
can Search the online issues of Society & Animals, as well
as the entire Society & Animals Forum (formerly PSYETA)
website,
for topics and keywords of your interest:
|