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The Social Practice of Racehorse Breeding
Rebecca Cassidy 1
Abstract
This paper suggests that the stories that thoroughbred breeders
tell about racehorse reproduction can contribute to an
understanding of their ideas about relatedness between humans.
It examines the thoroughbred pedigree as it is presented in the
English sales catalogue as a locus of complex ideas about
heredity, fertility, and procreation. It argues that resistance
within the industry to new reproductive technologies, including
artificial insemination, can be understood in terms of ideas
about relatedness between horses and, by implication, between
people. This paper is based upon extensive participant
observation conducted within the horseracing industry based in
the town of Newmarket, England.
Thoroughbred racehorses can run a mile in 1 minute 35 seconds
and reach speeds of up to 40 miles an hour. They are the fastest
breed of horse in the world, and my informants would like me to
add that they are also the very best. Thoroughbreds change hands
at public auction for vast sums of money. The majority are sold
as unraced yearlings who will not reach the racecourse until
their two-year-old season. In the absence of any racing “form,”
yearlings are assessed according to their pedigree and their
conformation. The most expensive yearling ever bought was sold
to Sheikh Mohammed of Dubai at Keeneland in Kentucky for
$13.1million in 1985. At the public auction held by the
Keeneland Association in Kentucky in 2000, 130 yearlings were
sold over three days for a total of $80,732,000. These figures
represent demand at the very highest levels of the bloodstock
industry, where a small number of individuals compete to buy the
best-bred yearlings of the annual crop.
All modern thoroughbreds are able to trace their ancestry to one
of three founding stallions, the Byerley Turk, Darley Arabian,
and Godolphin Arabian. This origin story forms one of the
explanations for the perceived excellence of the breed. To quote
a pedigree analyst:
[T]he existence of three initial progenitors, and their
continuation by not more than one progenitor each and three
progenitors in all, far from being a matter of course which
every student of the Thoroughbred has always taken for granted
as one of the curiosities of history, is instead a dramatic
punctuation of the essence of the Thoroughbred as an elite
animal destined to be influenced at every stage by an amazingly
small number of individuals. (Varola, 1974, p. 7)
The breeding record of the thoroughbred racehorse, The General
Studbook (1751), claims to be the first record of any breed of
any species and predates the compulsory recording of human
births and deaths in England by more than 46 years (Morris 1997,
p. 10). It has survived, uninterrupted and in virtually
unaltered format, until the present day. The stud book is
closed: Thoroughbreds are therefore born and not made.
Method
I work with the men, women, and years within the racing industry
in Newmarket, England describe nonhuman animals involved in the
international sport and industry of horseracing. I have
conducted participant observation during the past six d by its
inhabitants as the Headquarters of international flat racing
and in the Bluegrass of Kentucky, where the majority of the most
expensive thoroughbred stallions are based. During this time, I
have worked at training stables, on thoroughbred studs, at
auctions, and on racecourses. I am able to ride racehorses and
handle them in relative safety, a skill that has enabled me to
become part of this society to a degree not easily attainable by
a nonrider.
Despite its apparent orientation toward gambling, to many
individuals within the industry the purpose of the spectacle of
racing is to test the thoroughbred breed. The racecourse test
merely establishes the relative merits of each member of each
generation and thus enables decisions regarding its selective
breeding. Of course, this view would not be that of the
small-time punter huddling under the stands on a wet Wednesday
at Southwell, but it is a view supported by many of the more
traditional owners, trainers, breeders, and officials in
Britain. Racehorses perpetually are assessed according to their
pedigrees.
Unsurprisingly, similar concerns inform ideas of human
relatedness in Newmarket, as this informant makes clear: “Racing
is in our blood. My father was a trainer and his father before
him. My grandfather was a real stayer. I can spot a good horse a
mile off and you won’t beat me in a close finish.”
The discourse of personalities in Newmarket includes both horses
and humans, and the tendency to blur these categories is one of
the most distinctive features of this society:
I have always been fascinated by the way and it’s simply a
habit not an insult that racing people tend to refer to women
as though they are horses. I remember once asking Fred Winter
about what he thought of a certain trainer’s mistress and he
replied, “Oh, she’s very moderate”. (Bernard & Dodd 1991, p. 58)
Racing people are concerned with breeding, both human and
equine. Racing is also a strongly male-dominated industry. One
of my informants had previously worked in the mining industry
and told me that he found Newmarket slightly more chauvinistic
than a coal pit in South Wales. Women in Newmarket often told me
of the pressure they were under to conform to gender
stereotypes, as this schoolteacher (whose husband was a stud
groom) described:
I operate in the more common sphere where more or less people
judge you on your own merits. But because I won't adhere to the
fixed class infrastructure I'm not accepted. Because I won't tug
my forelock. My official role is to look over the stable door
and say “Ahh.” It is a sexist industry and it's because of being
a woman. I won't stay in and answer the phone like the last two
stud groom's wives. This world isn’t like a job. It’s like a
culture or a way of life.
The male dominance of this way of life can be found at all
levels, except for that of the racing “lad” where industry
statistics show that the number of women has finally overtaken
that of men. A senior racing figure described the situation as
follows:
We get quite a number of women trainers and there are no
restrictions in operation. I don't really know why there aren't
more women, they have equal opportunities. There are a lot of
female administrators, 11% in the Jockey Club for example. It
manifests itself more in the press room where on a day to day
meeting you wouldn't get a single girl (sic).
Not surprisingly, women who “make it” in racing are often
described as unfeminine, “You wouldn’t like her one bit Rebecca,
she’s a real tough old thing.” The only woman capable of short
circuiting this association is the Queen. In her case, class and
status “compensate” for gender.
In order to investigate these dynamics further, I shall discuss
the findings of fieldwork that took place at racehorse auctions,
where pedigree and breeding are of paramount importance. The
best-bred racehorses will attract the highest bids. Talking to
buyers and sellers about just what it meant to be “well bred”
revealed concerns about horses that made sense of the concerns
about humans that I have just outlined. The major thoroughbred
racehorse auctions in England and the United States are held
publicly at Tattersalls, Park Paddocks in Newmarket and at
Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky. Baudrillard’s (1981) argument
that, “The essential function of the auction is the institution
of a community of the privileged who define themselves as such
by agonistic speculation upon a restricted corpus of signs”(p.
117) is graphically illustrated at the sales. The ideas of
heredity expressed by this “community of the privileged” form
the subject of the next section.
Results
In discussions between bloodstock professionals, relatedness
amongst thoroughbreds is expressed both in human family terms
and in terms of blood, presented as the substance of heredity.
Thus, foals by the same dam and sire will be described as full
siblings. Foals by the same dam but different sires will be half
siblings. Foals by the same sire are not identified as half
siblings and so “half siblingship” has come to be identified
with relatedness on the dam’s side. A stallion’s offspring will
be discussed in terms of a “get,” the entirety of individuals he
has “sired.”
Aside from relations modeled on human families, foals may also
be, for example, “own sisters in blood” by virtue of their dams’
having been full sisters (Figure 1).
_______________________
Figure 1. Representing Pedigrees – the Sales Catalogue, 185.(not
available online)
_______________________
Foals may also be, for example, “Three parts brothers in blood,”
as Molesnes and the bay colt below (Figure 2).
_______________________
Figure 2. Extract from Sales Catalogue, 1997 Houghton Sales,
136..(not available online)
_______________________
Many other calculations can be made according to which all sorts
of fractional relationships in blood can be claimed. The limit
to these tends to be in the third generation, after which the
sales catalogue records such innocuous claims as “bred on
similar lines to ...” in order to claim a famous relative. The
substance of heredity can thus be separated from the individuals
who serve as its vehicles. The most expensive unraced yearlings
will be those who can claim the greatest number of illustrious
relatives either through blood or directly. The closer the
relationship between the yearling and his esteemed relatives the
more valuable he is likely to be.
In addition to discussing blood and familial relationships,
breeders have also begun to engage with ideas of heredity based
explicitly on genetic endowment. These ideas rely upon a
biometrical theory of genetics that states that the proportion
of genes in the overall genome of an offspring will be half of
each parent, quarter of each grandparent, and so on. As the
breeder Rae (1990) states confidently, “It is a law of genetics
that the foal will inherit 50% of its genes from the sire and
50% from the dam, and no amount of agonizing over the covering
will change that” (p. 4).
Ideas of heredity in contemporary Newmarket depend upon the
notion of preformation, which maintains that genes are insulated
from environmental influences. They also reflect the influence
of the one gene one trait model of Mendelian genetics
rediscovered at the beginning of the twentieth century. As one
racehorse breeder told me of one of his foals, “His dad had the
go-faster gene and it’s just 50:50 whether he’ll have it too.”
The idea that an ability to run fast is a trait that could be
determined by a single gene remains strong in Newmarket.
Recent work within biology has undermined the separation between
genes and the environment that this thinking depends upon,
creating an epigenetic approach that acknowledges the two-way
traffic between genes and the sociocultural milieu inhabited by
the individual organism. As the biologist Ho (personal
communication) explains, “environmental regimes influence the
physiology of the organism, and these organismic influences
leave physiological traces that may also be passed on, as
hormonal/nutritional status, maternal effects, and sometimes, as
alterations in the genes themselves.” Put simply, the influence
of environmental factors may have been mistaken for evidence of
heredity. As the equine geneticist Bowling (1996) suggests,
“When family members share an environment the effects of
non-genetic factors may mimic the appearance of an inherited
trait” (p. 141). In Newmarket, evidence of the influence of
nature is “seen” with far greater alacrity than that of
“nurture.”
The resilience of such pedigree thinking in the racing industry
cannot be explained on the results it achieves, since, as
breeders reluctantly admit,
The only certainty of pedigrees is that they will confound you.
No animal species is better documented than the Thoroughbred,
yet, after two centuries of controlled racing and breeding, the
laws of reproduction decree that luck will always be a major
factor. (Rae, 1990, p. 40)
Although Rae urges caution in predicting the outcome of a
particular covering, studies of horse genetics go further, in
questioning the effectiveness of selective breeding itself.
Bowling (1996) argues that, “So little is known about the
genetics of desirable traits, it is premature to suggest that
any general technique of structuring pedigrees consistently
produces either better or worse stock” (p. 140).
Some have used the lack of any improvement in race times through
the modern era of thoroughbred racing as evidence that the breed
has reached the limits of useful selection. The record books are
studded with famous failures expensive, beautifully bred horses
who have had little or no ability. Most notorious of all is the
case of Snaafi Dancer, the yearling who was bought by Sheikh
Mohammed for $13 million. He had perfect looks and a perfect
pedigree, but he was too slow ever to run in a race. His English
trainer, John Dunlop, employing the understatement that is
typical of his profession, described him as “quite a nice little
horse, but unfortunately no bloody good.”
The idea that a racehorse’s pedigree determines its ability is,
however, remarkably resilient and insulated from criticism by a
number of conventions. Pedigrees are employed in a piecemeal
fashion, with little effort made to maintain consistency or to
pursue the contradictions to which they unfailingly give rise.
For example, in discussing Anabaa, a precocious sprinter, and
winner of the July Cup at Newmarket in 1996, Willett (1996), a
“Bloodstock expert,” writing in Horse and Hound, stated that:
“The specialist speed of Balbonella and the speed which Anabaa
has inherited could not have been anticipated from her
pedigree”(p. 27). Despite this, Willett goes on to suggest that
the colt may well stay a mile on the basis that his great grand
dam, great grand sire, and great great grand dam were “stayers”.
Absence of an objective measure of performance further protects
pedigree. The “racecourse test” contains so many variables that
even expert assessments of ability will vary dramatically. Every
racecourse in England is topographically unique, few use
sectional timing, and there is no way of comparing performances
on one racecourse with those on another. The most common factors
used to explain the inconsistencies of racehorse performances
are interrupted preparation for a race, poor opposition, jockey
or trainer error, race conditions (weather, surface conditions,
interference during running), injury, and bad luck. Thus, poor
opposition may lead to a horse being overrated or injury may
prevent a horse from fulfilling his or her potential. The
quality of a racehorse’s pedigree (or any of its opponents) may
be disputed on any number of grounds, none of which can be
objectively established. This is summarized in the television
pundit’s opinion that “you could run this race five times and
have five different winners.” It is, of course, this terrific
uncertainty that makes horseracing such an attractive betting
medium.
Representing Pedigrees – the Sales Catalogue
At the sales, each horse that is to be sold has a page of the
catalogue devoted to breeding. The structure of the catalogue
page determines the quantity and nature of information offered
to the buyer by the vendor. The catalogues are so repetitive
that envisaging alternatives and thinking about what they would
mean becomes virtually impossible. The catalogue page devotes a
disproportionate amount of space to the dam (female) line, also
referred to as the bottom line, or tail line (Figure 3). This
was explained to me on the grounds that the dam line is the
weakness that must be shored up by being associated with
successful relatives, as if to reassure potential buyers that
the mare will not detract too much from the ability of the
stallion in his offspring.
Figure 3. Extract from Sales Catalogue, 1997 Houghton Sales,
346. (not available online)
Although a large proportion of racemares go on to have careers
at stud, very few colts go on to have careers as stallions
having retired from racing. Thus, while a stallion's quality is
made evident by his very presence at stud, mares are at stud by
default, simply on the grounds that they are female and too old
or slow to race. Selection of racehorses is thus sharply skewed,
stallions are intensively selected on the basis of their
pedigree and racecourse performances, while mares are often
“given a chance.” It is estimated that, “94% of colts and 48% of
fillies do not contribute genes to the next generation”
(Bowling, 1996, p. 127). The characterization of the racehorse
as the quintessentially selectively bred domestic animal is thus
only partially true.
The top section of pedigrees found in catalogues are “read” from
left to right. They also possess a shorthand whereby they may be
summarized by either their “top” or “bottom” line. The top line
charts the sire and sires of sires, the bottom line the dam and
dams of dams. The top line is said to represent the “strength”
of the pedigree, the bottom line the “weakness.”Of course, it is
possible to have a weak top line or a strong bottom line, but
these are relative to the overall top:bottom bias. The most
common shorthand for summarizing a pedigree is that of
mentioning the sire and the dam's sire. Thus, for example,
Zafonic, who is “by” Gone West, “out of” Zaizafon, who is “by”
The Minstrel, will be described as “Zafonic (Gone West, The
Minstrel).” Everyday discussions of yearlings would thus refer
to Zafonic as “a Gone West colt out of a Minstrel mare.”
The proportion of the catalogue assigned to the dam line and the
idea that the dam line is the “weakness ”in the pedigree relate
to ideas regarding racehorse fertility. The relevant image of
procreation is that the stallion will bring a substantial but
finite amount of talent to the mating. If most of this talent
must be “used up” in trying to bring the mare up to the standard
of the stallion, then very little will be left to pass onto the
foal. The mare is thus described as “empty” before she is
covered.
This image can be extended to apply to the entire catalogue that
becomes a map representing the annual distribution of blood
embodied by each yearling crop. “Blood” is thus presented as a
limited substance, distributed according to an equation that
balances the amount of talent brought by the stallion against
that used up by the mare in their production of a foal. In this
way, there are no real additions to the English Thoroughbred,
just novel combinations of blood, relative to each successive
generation.
The image of the thoroughbred racehorse perpetuated by its
breeders supports the contention of Yanagisako and Delaney
(1995) that origin stories are “a prime locus for a society's
notion of itself” (p. 2). Thomas's (1983) characterization of
the three founding stallions of the English thoroughbred as “a
kind of equine Adam, Noah or William the Conqueror” (p. 59)
fails to mention the most significant feature of the story: the
omission of its female protagonists. The mares who functioned as
catalysts in order that the breed might be established are
rarely mentioned. Because only the male ancestors of this
species are visible, the original blood is gendered and, thus,
diluted when combined with female blood in order to create a
foal. The representation of male and female racehorses in the
catalogue can thus be explained. The inherent weakness of the
dam line is protested against by the presence of illustrious
relations in the catalogue, and the small number of stallions at
stud serve as highly concentrated sources of the limited
quantity of “noble blood.” The patriarchal stallion myth can be
deduced from the structure of the catalogue page.
Assessment of the thoroughbreds at each of the most significant
stages of their careers at the sales, on the track, and at
stud reflects the disproportionate influence with which the
stallion is credited. Breeders and pundits discussing a
two-year-old will predict his ability in relation to his sire:
“Like all Sadler's Wells, he'll appreciate getting his toe in”
(horses by Sadler's Wells are thought to run faster on softer
ground), “He's by Ela Mana Mou, so he should get the trip.” (Ela
Mana Mou is thought to be “an influence for stamina”). “He's
just got geed up in the paddock, like a lot of Diesis do.”
(Diesis is thought to pass on a nervous disposition). At first
glance, the racing industry could almost be mistaken for a
society in which maternity was denied or went unnoticed.
This image of reproduction is similar to that described by
Delaney (1991) in relation to rural Turkey, an image she refers
to as monogeneticism, “The theory of procreation can be stated
very simply. The male is said to plant the seed and the woman is
said to be like a field” (Delaney, 1986, p. 496). Perhaps the
most explicit statement of this version of reproduction within
the bloodstock industry is found in the work of Italian
thoroughbred breeder Tesio, the “Wizard of Dormell.,” He was an
authority referred to by several informants. His theories were
many, but had consistent themes:
[T]he mare is like a sack which gives back what has been put
into it...The female is by nature weaker. The purpose of her
existence is the state of pregnancy. As soon as she becomes
pregnant the nervous - almost neurotic - symptoms of virginity
disappear. (Tesio, 1958, p. 10)
Foals are “by” their sires, and merely “out of” the mares who
carry them. Thoroughbred breeders are therefore able to combine
monogeneticism and biometric genetics because though the foal is
said to be “50% its sire and 50% its dam” the contribution made
by each is complementary but different in kind. The stallion is
seen as contributing those traits that are most valued by racing
society, those mystical qualities that affect racing ability:
“presence,” “courage,” or “heart.” The mare’s contributions
often are either temperamental or mundane. As Delaney (1986)
observes of rural Turkey, “Paternity is not the semantic
equivalent of maternity” (p. 495).
Discussion: Artificial Insemination, Horse Love, and the
“Stallion Drain”
During fieldwork, one of the most productive loci for discussing
ideas about heredity could be found in resistance to
reproductive technologies and in particular to artificial
insemination (AI). The rules of the International Stud Book
currently ban AI:
A horse is not qualified to be entered for start in any race
unless it and its sire and dam are each the produce of a natural
service or covering, and unless a natural gestation took place
in, and the delivery was from, the body of the mare in which the
horse was conceived. (Ruff’s Guide to the Turf 1996, p. 124)
The Chairman of the National Stud, Peter Player, recently
responded to a government report that suggested that the stud
should widen its remit by saying:
As long as I'm chairman, there will be no unacceptable
veterinary research, in any form, carried out at the stud-in
other words, practices contrary to those allowed in the
worldwide breeding of thoroughbreds. Those that spring to mind
include artificial insemination, embryo transfers, cloning and,
particularly, genetic engineering. No Dolly the sheep. You
couldn't possibly have any of that going on alongside the stud
being open to the general public and acting as a shop window for
our industry. We're thoroughbred through and through, and should
stick rigidly to that principle. We must not mix oil and water.
(Smurthwaite, p. 13, 2000)
The most sustained opposition to AI that I experienced came from
a thoroughbred breeder who had recently retired from riding in
amateur races at the age of 73. She told me:
The semen used for pigs in Holland has become diseased and the
farms in this country are using bulls again for a 'top up'. How
is a mare's instinct to be covered going to be satisfied? By the
vet and some semen in a false vagina? The best winners I have
ever bred have been by sires whose legs really pump away like
pistons during copulation - I'm sure that some transfer of
energy is capable of improving the chances of getting a good
energetic foal. What will fulfill that criteria in AI? A vet
with a long sleeved glove? I'm very worried about it.
This breeder also told me the story of the conception of a great
racehorse that was the result of two horses “falling in love.”
It was when the horses were walked everywhere before the
horsebox, and the stallion was being led along the road, and
passed a mare on her way to something else, I mean, she wasn't
even going to this horse. And they looked at each other and that
was it. They overcame their handlers and made love on the
Cambridge Road.
Similarly, a stud groom told me,
The mare needs to feel the weight of the stallion on her back,
and for the energy of the covering to go into her. Using a test
tube won't produce the same effects and you can't fool these old
mares. They know what's natural.
These ideas echo the work of Tesio and his followers. In fact,
the foal bred on the Cambridge Road belonged to Tesio and was
called Signorinetta. She won the Derby in 1908. Tesio’s (1958)
explanation for her undoubted talent extends the same
reproductive themes:
[I]n the case of Signorinetta, it is not unlikely that the issue
was affected by the circumstances of the unplanned encounter
between her parents. The arrows of an equine cupid roused the
sexual urge to a maximum of tension which endowed the resulting
individual with exceptional energy...this result is never
achieved with artificial insemination because the parents are
cheated of their pleasurable spasm with its violent nervous
release. (p. 93)
Star of Naples, full sister to Signorinetta and the product of a
planned mating, proved untalented, the product of a lackluster
covering due, according to Tesio, to the embarrassment of the
dam and sire following their previous exploits.
Bob McCreery, chairman of a group commissioned by the British
Thoroughbred Breeders Association to investigate the potential
impact of AI remains bemused, “I have never known why AI
provokes such controversy. To people who know about breeding and
animal husbandry it is not so shocking” (Hislop, 1997, p. 17).
It seems that McCreery does not realize how shocking AI is to
those who believe that the stallion is the essential part of
reproduction, because the heat and weight and energy of
intercourse must go into the mare for conception, or at least
good conception, to occur. The quality of covering is thought to
affect the quality of the offspring thereby produced, and AI is
not an energetic process. To use Delaney’s analogy, the energy
involved in the act of planting the seed is lost. The field does
not produce the right sort of energy (creative, individuating),
and so a lackluster heir is produced. The foal produced by AI is
too much the docile, nurturing (i.e. female) expression of its
parents and not enough the powerful, singular (i.e. male)
elements.
Breeders also worry that AI would prompt the depletion of the
gene pool. The theory of pedigree rests upon the ability of
breeders to maintain the “purity” of the breed by witnessing
coverings and blood typing foals. The depletion of the gene pool
constitutes a loss of blood, offending those who see themselves
as its custodians, responsible for determining its distribution.
This loss is often imagined through stories in which blood
crosses international boundaries and is thereby lost to a malign
foreign influence:
According to the Duke (of Devonshire), “fanciful stories” arose
about vials of frozen semen being shipped around the world at
will, making for priceless bargaining chips allowing an elite
band of stallions to cover hundreds of mares at the expense of
others. The impact on the gene pool would be unimaginable. (Smurthwaite,
1997, p. 7)
The blood of the stallions no longer in demand would be lost.
These are stories about loss and loss of control, in which blood
no longer would be mapped or limited, and so, being unrecorded,
would lose its capacity to explain ability.
The loss of blood is also the theme of the “stallion drain,” the
export of stallions that is a current concern of the British
bloodstock industry. The terms in which it is described again
reflect the threat that export constitutes to the national
identity of English blood by resonating with xenophobia, as in
this extract from an article in The Guardian newspaper:
It is hard to see in these Japanese incursions much more than
mere acquisitiveness, a desire to possess comparable with the
desire to buy great works of art, many of which now languish
unseen in the Tokyo bank vaults. At the Houghton Sales in
Newmarket last week, I have rarely seen people look more bored
than the phalanx of Japanese who sat around the auction ring
dressed in perfect English county clothes but carrying cameras
rather than binoculars. Like the art works, the horses that go
to Japan are disappearing into a black hole...we see no more
than the occasional foal by Generous who returns to run in
Britain, bringing with him a wealth of memories and a terrible
sense of loss. (Thompson, 1996, p. 6)
It seems that, as in the eighteenth century when the blood of a
thoroughbred reflected positively on that of his aristocratic
owner, it is necessary to be of the right blood oneself in order
to be favored by, rather than condemned or mocked for, this
association. The pedigrees of the founding stallions of the
breed express this point clearly, by running forward to the
English thoroughbred, rather than backward to the Barb, Turk or
Arabian.
Conclusion
Pedigree is the ideology used to police the boundaries
within the racing industry, between different classes, genders,
and nations. In relation to class-based distinctions, blood maps
ability and explains the presence of traits within families.
Gender determines relative potency and contribution to the
process whereby blood is reconfigured and society reproduced.
And blood is owned. It is “ours” rather than “theirs,” enabling
discrimination between different groups, including nations.
Focusing upon AI as a case study has enabled me to examine one
example of the metonymic contortions by which women and men in
the racing industry imagine their lives and those of others
through the lives of horses, not to mention the lives of horses
through their own. The resistance of the thoroughbred industry
to technologies such as AI has generally been explained by
recourse to its financial implications for the smaller breeder.
This paper has suggested that the threat represented by AI is
not only financial but also existential. The moral universe of
the racing industry contains both horses and humans. By
unshackling procreation from sex, AI undermines the structuring
principles of the thoroughbred breed. In doing so, it causes
considerable anxiety amongst its human guardians.
Notes
* Rebecca Cassidy, Goldsmiths College
[1] Correspondence should be sent to Dr.
Rebecca Cassidy, The Anthropology Department, Goldsmith College,
New Cross, London SE14 6NW, UK. Thanks to Janet Carsten for all
of her guidance. Thanks also to two anonymous reviewers for
their helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper, and
to Kenneth Shapiro for his sound editorial advice. This paper
was written during a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at
the Department of Social Anthropology at Cambridge University
and at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Fieldwork took place during an
Edinburgh University Postgraduate Studentship. This data will be
presented in a slightly different form and at greater length in
a forthcoming publication with Cambridge University Press
entitled, The Sport of Kings: kinship, class and racehorse
breeding in Newmarket.
[1] Conformation refers to the muscular
and skeletal structure of the yearling. There are no objective
measures for assessing conformation, and the ability to select
talented yearlings is described as having ‘an eye’ (for a
horse). This form of assessment warrants its own investigation
but this will not be undertaken here.
[1] Thoroughbred stallions are
periodically valued at more than their weight in gold. Fusiachi
Pegasus, for example, the runaway winner of the 2000 Kentucky
Derby, recently changed hands for £60 million. The value of a
stallion depends upon the covering fee he can command. Storm
Cat, the most expensive stallion in the world today costs
$400,000 (£277,000), per covering, about double that of
his closest rival. If he produces 70 live foals this year (a
conservative estimate) he will earn his owner $28 million (£19.4
million).
[1] In fact, the embodied practice that
constitutes “horsemanship” is a virtual necessity in a society
in which people are constantly testing your ‘credentials’. You
might be asked for example, to “just grab hold of that mare for
me,” or “hand me that scraper.” If you can’t perform the task,
identifying the item in question, or having the confidence to
take hold of the horse, you establish your status as an outsider
in a very obvious way.
[1] Other sales held in England include
those at Ascot and Doncaster racecourses, and in Kentucky at
Fasig-Tipton. There are also important sales at Goffs and
Tattersalls in Ireland.
[1] This “community of the privileged”
is the focus of my work on the bloodstock auction. However, in
this context I restrict myself to ideas of racehorse procreation
and their connection to the contemporary resistance to AI by
thoroughbred breeders.
[1] See for example, William Hill,
Professor of Animal Genetics at Edinburgh University who, in
1988 asked, Why aren’t racehorses faster?
[1] “Stayers” are horses suited to
running further than ‘sprinters’ who race over short distances,
usually less than a mile.
[1] Racehorses having their first run,
often as two-year-olds, are most likely to be the subjects of
assessment according to their pedigree since they have no
existing “form” that may be helpful in predicting their
performance.
[1] I was often told that good racemares
rarely made good broodmares. Whilst working on a stud, for
example, I was told the story of a famous racemare who was “no
good” at stud: “She was a right bitch, she wasn't having any of
it. She thought that she was a stallion. I s'pose that's why she
was so good. She was used to beating colts and she didn't want
to be a mother'.”The good racemare is an anomaly because she
excels in a male dominated sphere. My informant attributed her
failure at stud to her own gender confusion.
References
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Bernard, J., & Dodd, H. (1991). Sizing up a filly. In J. Bernard
& H. Dodd (Eds.), Tales from the turf (pp. 52-65). London:
George
Weidenfield & Nicolson,.
Bowling, A. (1996). Horse Genetics, London: CAB International.
Delaney, C. (1986). The meaning of paternity and the virgin
birth debate. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society, 21
(2) 494-513.
Delaney, C. (1991). The Seed and the soil:Gender and cosmology
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Hill, W. (1988). Why aren’t horses faster? Nature, 332, 722-724.
Hislop, L. (1997, January 19). Agreement sought over AI. The
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Morris, T. (1997, December 30). A collector’s item to cherish: A
look at the latest edition of the General Stud Book. The Racing
Post, p. 10.
Rae, G. (1990). The Sporting Life Guide to owning a racehorse: A
handbook for present and future Owners. London: The Sporting
Life.
Smurthwaite, T. (1997, January 16). AI problem still present.
The Sporting Life, p.7.
Smurthwaite, T. (2000, December 4). No hello for Dolly at the
National. The Racing Post, p. 13.
Tesio, F. (1958). Breeding the racehorse (E. Spinola, Trans.).
London: Allen and Unwin.
Thomas, K. (1983). Man and the natural world: Changing attitudes
in England 1500-1800, London: Allen Lane.
Thompson, L. (1996, October 11). Big yen for fresh blood. The
Guardian, pp. 6-7.
Varola, F. (1974). Typology of therRacehorse, London: J. A.
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Willett, P. (1996, July 25). Heads you win. Horse and Hound, p.
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