Listen to Us: Perceptions of Animal Voice and Agency
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Interview Participants
- worked or are working with living animals in a range of contexts, and/or
- contributed to critical or deep thinking concerning human–animal relationships, and/or
- represented animals in public discourse.
2.2. Interview Procedure
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. The Animal Voice and the Role of Human Language in Shaping Perceptions
3.1.1. Animals Do/Do Not Have a Voice
“I think within this term, speaking for animals, that’s the danger and tendency, that what you’re doing is actually replicating the idea that animals cannot communicate and aren’t able to partake in co-creation of space or ideas or community. For me, the concept of speaking for animals is within this Western, White, European enlightenment, colonial mindset. You don’t get it in Indigenous mindsets. Animals speak for themselves there. They absolutely speak for themselves through spirit, through mystery, through myth…”(Mischa)
“…There’s a fantastic organisation in Australia called Voiceless but I continue to disagree with the name of their organisation because they (animals) do have a voice and they do communicate—we just don’t share a common language….and so it is common to say they’re voiceless because they don’t speak our tongue…”(Snowy Owl)
“I think it’s highly arrogant of me to think I can speak for a snake. I’m just not comfortable with that…I just feel that it would be limiting of me to try and do that because the snake is so much richer and more sophisticated than I will ever be.”(Snake Advocate)
“I think the issue of consent brings an important issue to the fore of, is this a self-proclaimed right to decide what is best for animals from a human point of view? The first step there to minimise that would be to listen to animals, and listening would be more than theoretical, through for example science and seeing how they behave, what their ethology is. Listening is a physical act as well, and it involves proximity, it involves sharing the landscape.”(Cat Man)
“…and I get that some animal advocates say that’s at the heart of the subordination of animals that we just feel that we can, with very limited authority or knowledge interfere in the lives of animals who don’t understand as well. And talking to someone who’s working with an animal psychologist recently it actually came home to me how I don’t know anything about how dogs socialise—and still unreflexibly willing to intervene in an animal’s activities on that basis. And then we have people who work for advocacy organisations. And some of those people seem extremely knowledgeable about animals, and some of those people seem extremely unknowledgeable about animals—but by and large, many of them are to some degree self-appointed individuals.”(White Ibis)
“They desperately need us to speak for them…I mean animals on the one hand, have no option. They have no voice as it were. They can’t speak for themselves as it were…I have sheep here, rescue sheep. They do speak for themselves. But the way they speak takes a lot of experience to hear anything that they are trying to say…. So I would say, ideally, people speaking for animals have experience of animals. But 95 per cent of Australians live in cities. They don’t have that kind of opportunity.”(Daniel)
“So, I think what we need is to change the paradigm. We have to think about animals as we think about our children, vulnerable creatures that we need to protect, look after and you only stress or harm them when it is very important for their own good. I only subject my dog to a vaccine if it’s for their own good”(Maria)
“Animals to me are the most stigmatised and silenced social group, like to me, they are a social population in the same way that we have different human social groups that are stigmatised and silenced—animals don’t get to have a voice at all and that’s existed for other human groups over time and the way those groups are silenced is through structural stigmatisation through language, in particular policy and legislation. So, the language that we use to talk about those issues and those beings is designed to silence them or make them invisible or undermine their right to have a voice—or the meaningfulness of their voice.”(Gunter Goose)
“So listening to animals is […] less than a priority, it’s like negative priority […] we want the opposite of listening to animals—we don’t want to hear them at all. I mean, we’re breeding meat so that we can still eat meat and […] we’re doing cell-ag, which I think is a good thing and hopefully that will help change the world but, we want meat so badly that we’re investing billions every year so we can grow it in a lab so that it doesn’t have a brain it just has flesh so that we can continue on eating this thing that we really want—without having to deal with the individual—and any of the (laughs) communications that would arise…”(Snowy Owl)
“…the general public as animal using community does express a concern for the wellbeing of all animals—but we know that companion animals are treated different to production animals and animals that are kind of classified as pest animals—and there were some interesting studies that were done around cognitive dissonance that shows that people do not really want to talk about animals that they consume… particularly the closer they get to a consumption […] so, I guess in that kind of ‘who gets to speak for animals’ […] is also who is listening.”(White Ibis)
“…he tells me stuff that he has seen and learned in labs, like for example—the vocalisations of rats—this is about their communication and our listening and discerning and interpreting—and I didn’t know until he told me about rats’ laugh […] they have high pitched sounds of joy when they’re with their loved ones—and if they’re having a good laugh, like if you’re tickling them—they’ll have a really good laugh […] and the study has shown that this is happening, which makes it all the sadder that we can’t hear that…”(Snowy Owl)
“Nature does not usually allow for frivolity, birds sing and communicate information for purposes that we think simplistically advances their reproductive success or their dominance over other birds—but there’s a lot more going on than that, and I think we are just beginning this current phase of understanding animal behaviour…”(Old Man Winter)
3.1.2. Human Language Creates Realities and Paradigms
“…I think because we don’t have a history of paying close attention, it’s a history of othering—of diminishing their value and their worth in the hierarchy we’ve created about humanity, all of these reasons for us to not listen to animals, not to pay attention…”(Snowy Owl)
“In fact, I consider this all the same fight pretty much and the same challenge, the challenge being anthropocentrism as a paradigm, as a worldview. If you look at it that way, then we’re talking about folks who I think can speak for animals are folks who treat this not as an environmental issue, not as an ecological issue but as a social justice issue, in the same way that you would treat any environmental justice issue to more vulnerable marginalised human communities.”(Cat Man)
“…so thinking about the Royal Society for the Protection of Animals in Queensland it was originally the Royal Society for the Protection of Animals and Children ….and so, we see these things as separate today but once upon a time they were actually much more conjoined—I think it points to that we have become calcified into a particular form of structural relationship around the debates about animals—and that’s not necessarily a natural or necessary thing—it could be subject to contestation.”(White Ibis)
“…every country has its own taxonomy of animals and what animals are—in Australia the possum is a wonderfully cute animal that you would create an effigy of to give to a child whereas in New Zealand, the possum is an invasive species, and you might recruit children to systematically cull them at the schools…and […] particularly in regards to animals, there’s no rhyme nor reason to the inclusion or exclusion of different animals from the circle of compassion and that’s the way in which people will speak for them.”(White Ibis)
“I don’t think that you can tailor your speech for animals by saying these are the animals we can speak for and these animals we can’t. I don’t think you can pick and choose because then you’re imposing an aesthetic on the world. You know, it’s an aesthetic. It’s not consistent.”(Daniel)
“In Victoria, we have codes of practice for different species of animals. Only the ones that relate to cats and dogs are mandatory to follow and illegal to break, the ones for agricultural animals and racing animals, they are all just voluntary, so it really doesn’t give them any sort of protection…a greyhound will be in the racing industry and basically have no protection and then as soon as they finish racing and get adopted as a pet, they suddenly have some sort of legal protection when they’re the same animal—their situation has just changed so, it’s a very clear issue in terms of how we view them”(Gigi)
“Legally, it doesn’t have a strong direct impact on actual substantive duties towards animals under the law. It depends on how sentience is recognised and whether it is attached to actual operative provisions within the act. But at the moment, it’s just more symbolic.”(Shy Albatross)
“…I think that is subject to contestation, but I think that’s really interesting how theoretically that is supposed to be a game-changer […]—but yet there is massive continuity, and it just shows how power is really written into the fundamental systems of production that are resistant to change—”(White Ibis)
“So yeah, I think it’s positive. It’s funny because we campaigned to have sentience recognised in law. Then when people ask you like, well what does that mean, and you say well, it’s just about recognising the fact that animals can feel fundamentally. People sort of look at you like you know, who denies that?”(Shy Albatross)
“…We’re conditioned to listen for a language whereas animals are often quite embodied. You don’t just listen with your ears, or you can’t say you’re listening to animals because you read twenty papers on the ethology of these animals and suddenly, you’re an expert on them—your credentials speak for them almost—when you don’t know them…”(Cat Man)
“We’re judging on something which, you know, the focus is very narrow. It’s all about harm, it’s suffering, it’s pain and it’s that what we are talking about when talking for the animal. Mostly what we are not doing is about the daily life of an animal. It’s not the feelings of the animal. It’s just does it like to talk to you, does it want to look at television, does it tell you to put on the radio or whatever? So, there is more than this actually, but we are very narrow in the discussion. It’s not the whole total behaviour and living of the animal we are talking about when we talk about speaking for an animal.”(Junior)
“I think it leads on from what we were just talking about in terms of the physical scientists and the reductive nature of positivist scientific discourses. So that the fundamental underpinnings of that kind of science can lead you down very blinkered paths that don’t take into consideration the feelings or thoughts of animals in a meaningful way. It’s only about observable traits and responses. That’s a dangerous thing when you see agriculture industrialising more and more. Animals being put in sheds and vets being tasked with keeping them alive”(Busy Bee)
“…there are a lot of vets who don’t have that [legitimacy to talk about animal welfare science, ethics, and law] and are still considered and taken by government and industry to be experts on animal welfare which I think is really interesting because in reality the animal welfare that’s taught in vet schools is tiny…we know more about wildlife than animal welfare in terms of what we’re taught, and we don’t know much about wildlife…”(Blue Angel)
“There are guestimates, there’s great science on evolutionary biology, but they’ve [snakes] been here a long time and I just think there’s so much that we don’t understand about these animals, and I love that. I love the fact that we’ll never fully understand how they navigate, how they feel, how they communicate with each other. That’s why I feel like I’m maybe not your orthodox scientist who wants to know everything.”(Snake Advocate)
3.1.3. Let Animals Speak
“Listening to the movement, sounds, demands and needs of the domestic companion in the domestic space is really important. The more you do that, the more you deepen your relationship. I think it’s much more profound. I think a lot more people know it and it would be great if we had more cultural recognition of how profound that is.”(Mischa)
“They [animals] have been the primary teachers of—are we actually listening to what these individuals have to say? The only way I would have ever been able to figure him [cat companion] out is just spending time next to him, not only observing him and complying with his cues but—just observe what this individual wants, what he finds pleasurable when I am not engaging with him as well… It speaks so much to the physical aspect of listening…that the individuals need to get physically comfortable with you before they start showing you who they are…I thought that a cat is a cat, and a dog is a dog”(Cat Man)
“I can take all my insights and experiences and try and bundle them up into something that people think, oh, next time I see a snake, I’m not going to freak out. I’m not going to use that shovel. I might just leave it alone.”(Snake Advocate)
“It’s the paradigmatic structures of anthropocentrism and human exceptionalism that need to be dismantled, and we can’t dismantle them by doing piecemeal changes through anthropocentric practices. That is not going dismantle the overall structure. I think this whole idea of speaking for the animals because they can’t speak for themselves is that anthropocentric reinforcement, whereas speaking for the animals to amplify their voice and advocate for them in ways that they don’t have access to, is at least attempting and non-anthropocentric practice.”(Mischa)
“I think it’s absolutely fine to experiment and explore representing animal language in human language, with understanding the caveat that we can’t ever do that properly…I think that is actually a really interesting area for exploration. I think all of those [creative writers], or certainly Gene Stone, certainly Laura Jean McKay, they would consider themselves advocates for animals. They are performing it outside of standard advocacy space, but they are advocating for animal representation. I don’t have an answer or theory about it, but I think it’s a really valuable space for exploring this question…”(Mischa)
“… and this game, Wingspan, which is produced by female game designers, was hugely successful and sort of talks about this great cultural thirst for animal related stuff in every kind of area, and in the sense the game itself is about animals and laying eggs and their lifecycle […] that represent talking about animals and learning about animals in different ways… I just think on a kind of practical everyday basis it really is people within the cultural industry who predominantly dominate the talking for or representing animals—not really advocates and activists”(White Ibis)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Notes on Methodology and Author Personal Perspective and Potential Influence
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Subthemes | Summary |
---|---|---|
Animal Voice | Animals do/do not have a voice | Animals already speak/communicate Artificial voicelessness |
Sometimes animals need us to speak for them: contextual voicelessness | ||
Knowledge deficiency of animal language and communication | ||
We are only just beginning to understand | ||
Human language constructs realities and paradigms | Misguided conceptions and messages; inconsistency, speciesism, anthropocentrism, othering. | |
Scientific reductionism, ontological, and epistemological approaches to understanding animal voice | ||
Let animals speak | Listening Communication is more than spoken language: embodied and visual. Knowledge, intimacy, compassion, respect, reciprocity Amplify animal voices |
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Thomsen, A.M.; Borrie, W.T.; Miller, K.K.; Cardilini, A.P.A. Listen to Us: Perceptions of Animal Voice and Agency. Animals 2023, 13, 3271. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13203271
Thomsen AM, Borrie WT, Miller KK, Cardilini APA. Listen to Us: Perceptions of Animal Voice and Agency. Animals. 2023; 13(20):3271. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13203271
Chicago/Turabian StyleThomsen, Anja M., William T. Borrie, Kelly K. Miller, and Adam P. A. Cardilini. 2023. "Listen to Us: Perceptions of Animal Voice and Agency" Animals 13, no. 20: 3271. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13203271
APA StyleThomsen, A. M., Borrie, W. T., Miller, K. K., & Cardilini, A. P. A. (2023). Listen to Us: Perceptions of Animal Voice and Agency. Animals, 13(20), 3271. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13203271