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History and Animal Studies
Harriet Ritvo 1
Animals other than human can hardly be characterized as novel
historical subjects. Their remains have provided valuable
evidence for historians of cultures that left little or no
written trace. They traditionally have attracted the attention
of economic historians, especially those who study times and
places heavily dependent on agriculture. In more recent times,
important animal-related institutions, from humane societies to
zoos, have had their chroniclers. People distinguished in their
association with animals, from breeders to hunters to
scientists, have had their biographers as, indeed, have some
animals distinguished in their own right: Jumbo, Greyfriars
Bobby, or Seabiscuit. Specific animal-related issues or
practices have received focused attention, and historians
working in specialized areas continue to make use of such
excellent studies as French’s Antivivisection and medical
science in Victorian society (1975). Even some much earlier work
continues to be useful. Specific animal-related issues or
practices have received focused attention, and historians
working in specialized areas continue to make use of such
excellent studies as French’s. Even some much earlier work
continues to be useful. For example, E. P. Evans’ survey of The
criminal prosecution and capital punishment of animals, which
first appeared in 1906, has been republished twice in the last
twenty years; and Gustave Loisel’s expansive Histoire des
ménageries de l'antiquité à nos jours, which first appeared in
1912, has not yet been superceded.
Nevertheless, the last several decades have seen significant
changes in the attitude of historians toward the study of
animals. One shift is simply quantitative: Animals (or the
relationships between human beings and other animals) have been
attracting more frequent and sustained scholarly attention.
There are several ways to understand this increase. One is by
analogy to a set of earlier expansions in historical
perspective. Historians’ sense of what was important in the past
tends to mirror their sense of what is important in the present.
Shifts in social and political understandings normally are
reflected, with some time lag, in the topics that scholars
select for historical research. Thus, the field of labor history
emerged in response to the labor movement of the early twentieth
century; the fields of women’s history and minority history
constitute part of the academic response to the civil rights
movement and the women’s movement. In the last quarter of the
twentieth century, animal-related causes — from saving the
whales to abolishing factory farming — gained increasing popular
support in North America and Europe. Predictably enough,
successful (or even conspicuous) advocacy in the political
sphere led to increased interest among historians. As each of
these new fields gained acceptance within the wider community of
historians, the range of historical subjects considered serious
(even legitimate) correspondingly expanded. Animals can be seen
as the latest beneficiaries of this increasingly inclusive or
democratic trend (sometimes called “history from the bottom up”)
within the historical profession.
Historical attention to animals also has been encouraged by the
vigorous growth of environmental history, another field that
developed in tandem with an activist political movement.
Environmental history currently is one of the most vital and
attractive areas of historical scholarship. In addition to a
fresh set of subjects, it offers a fresh set of approaches and a
way of understanding history that is inherently synthetic and
trans-national. Animals ordinarily have not been among the most
prominent concerns of environmental historians, who have tended
to focus on the roots of such modern issues as pollution or on
large and contested concepts like “wilderness” or “nature.” But
the relationship of animals to these themes is clear, as is the
ineluctable role of animals in considerations of our relation to
the nonhuman world. Further, the intellectual appeal of
environmental history has drawn some older fields into its
orbit. Thus, agricultural history now can be reconceptualized as
a kind of intermediary between environmental history and the
history of technology. Environmental history journals and
conferences routinely feature research about animal breeding and
farming as well as research about hunting, preservation, and
endangered species.
As more historians have chosen to work on animal-related topics,
such topics increasingly have been integrated into the
disciplinary mainstream. This change has been at least as
important as the simple quantitative increase. It reflects two
convergent tendencies. One is the willingness of historians who
work on other topics to acknowledge the historical significance
of animals. The other is the inclination of historians who work
on animal-related topics to present them as part of the general
history of a given time and place rather than isolating them in
peripheral, or even antiquarian, sub-fields. Most of the books
that paved the way for the current lively interest in animals
among historians exemplify this trend: James Turner’s Reckoning
with the beast: Animals, pain and humanity in the Victorian mind
(1980); Keith Thomas’s Man and the natural world: A history of
the modern sensibility (1983); Jean Claude Schmitt’s The holy
greyhound: Guinefort, healer of children since the thirteenth
century (1983, original French publication, 1979); my own The
animal estate: The English and other creatures in the Victorian
Age (1987); and Kathleen Kete’s The beast in the boudoir:
Petkeeping in nineteenth-century Paris (1994).
Such integration, of course, is not quite consistent with seeing
the historical work of the last two decades as part of a
multi-disciplinary field of “animal studies.” But it is
consistent with the uneasiness that historians often feel about
fields characterized as “studies” of one kind or another. As
with the umbrella category of “cultural studies,” such
designations seem to foreground shared topical interests and
de-emphasize divergent scholarly methods and goals. They
sometimes lead to claims that historicist literary or other
cultural studies are the same thing as cultural history. Such
claims, however, have no bearing on the question of what
contribution recent historical scholarship has made to “animal
studies.” In a general sense, the answer to this question is
obvious — or at least the answer is not unique to the study of
animals. The study of the past provides a necessary foundation
for understanding the present; and historical research provides
the essential context for more exclusively interpretive
scholarship.
In particular, recent years have seen excellent work by
historians on a wide variety of animal-related topics. Much of
this work deals with issues that also have attracted the
interest of scholars in anthropology, literary and cultural
studies, sociology, and other disciplines. One major focus of
attention has been the relationship between scientists (whether
zoologists, naturalists, or physiologists) and the animals they
study. It has been productively explored in, for example,
Nicolaas Rupke’s collection, Vivisection in historical
perspective (1987), in Adrian Desmond’s imaginative work on the
Zoological Society of London, and in Louise Robbins’ Elephant
slaves and pampered parrots: Exotic animals in
eighteenth-century Paris (2001).Such studies also have firmly
grounded our understanding of past scientific practices in the
cultures to which the scientists belonged, rather than seeing
such practices primarily as the antecedents of their modern
equivalents. Conservation and hunting, still hot topics, have
been the subject of general overviews like John MacKenzie’s The
empire of nature: Hunting, conservation and British imperialism
(1988) and of monographs like Robert Paddle’s The last
Ttasmanian tiger: The history and extinction of the thylacine
(2000). The breeding of domesticated animals has been a
particularly evocative topic for the same reason that it is
fraught with special dangers for scholars: The analogies between
humans and their animal companions and livestock are so strong
and compelling. Historical works such as Juliet Clutton-Brock’s
A natural history of domesticated mammals (1989) and Nicholas
Russell’s Like engend’ring like: Heredity and animal breeding in
early modern England (1986) offer clear, scientifically informed
accounts of complex processes and relationships. Historical
research on animals has been thriving within the discipline of
history; historians’ sense of their field has expanded to
include such topics. And at the same time that this widened
perspective has enriched the discipline of history, it also has
made a similar contribution to “animal studies.”
* Harriet Ritvo, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
[1] Correspondence should be sent to Harriet Ritvo, History
Faculty, E-51-288, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge, MA 02139. E-Mail: hnritvo@mit.edu
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