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Re: Thoreau on the Moose, Paul Theroux
Off the top of my head . . . for me the outrage comes less from the fact
that animals are killed but more from the swagger of many hunters. You
don't often hear slaughterhouse workers brag about their kills or find
cow heads mounted on their walls.
Clark Meyer
English Department
Head Coach, Varsity Girls Soccer
The Westminster Schools
404-609-6257
http://clarkbeast.wordpress.com/
>>> Sarah McFarland <sarah.mcfarland@earthlink.net> 9/17/2008 11:34 AM
>>>
Hi Karla,
I suspect that a big part of why hunted animals are singled out for
outrage is because they are individuals. Factory farmed animals are
"cows" or "pigs" or "chickens" but not "Bambi."
Sarah
On Sep 17, 2008, at 7:46 AM, Karla Armbruster wrote:
Going in a bit of a different direction:
I'm no fan of Palin's, and I'm not a hunter. But I am always curious
about why hunting generates such an outraged response (and equally
outraged defense) when far more animals in this country are killed
for food after miserable, insanity-inducing lives in factory farms
and feedlots. Theroux doesn't even address whether or not he eats
factory-farmed meat, or meat at all (I'm guessing he doesn't eat
hunted meat). Clearly, it's not simply the life of an animal that is
the issue. (And I'm letting Thoreau off the hook here because,
fortunately for him, he did not know about factory farms. And he did
pay some attention to domesticated animals, as Barney Nelson has
pointed out in her book _The Domestic and the Wild_.)
Is this different level of interest due to the privileging of wild
animals over domestic? Is there something about the dignity of the
wild at stake that catches our interest? I am asking this as a
genuine question — why hunting is so interesting to people and the
treatment of animals in factory farms and feedlots is not — which I
hope will enlarge the hunting discussion rather than criticize or
silence it.
Karla
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Karla Armbruster, Ph.D.
Associate Professor and Chair, English
Co-Chair, Environmental Studies
Webster University
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