Donna Haraway When Species Meet ch1 PDF
Donna Haraway When Species Meet ch1 PDF
Donna Haraway When Species Meet ch1 PDF
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgments vii
Notes 303
Publication History 393
Index 395
I. WE HAVE NEVER
BEEN HUMAN
1. WHEN SPECIES MEET
Introductions
Two questions guide this book: () Whom and what do I touch
when I touch my dog? and () How is “becoming with” a practice
of becoming worldly? I tie these questions together in expressions I
learned in Barcelona from a Spanish lover of French bulldogs, alter-
globalisation and autre-mondialisation.1 These terms were invented by
European activists to stress that their approaches to militarized neolib-
eral models of world building are not about antiglobalization but about
nurturing a more just and peaceful other-globalization. There is a prom-
ising autre-mondialisation to be learned in retying some of the knots of
ordinary multispecies living on earth.
I think we learn to be worldly from grappling with, rather than gen-
eralizing from, the ordinary. I am a creature of the mud, not the sky. I am
a biologist who has always found edification in the amazing abilities
of slime to hold things in touch and to lubricate passages for living
beings and their parts. I love the fact that human genomes can be
found in only about percent of all the cells that occupy the mun-
dane space I call my body; the other percent of the cells are
filled with the genomes of bacteria, fungi, protists, and such,
4 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
Our kind of capacity for perception and sensual pleasure ties us to the
lives of our primate kin. Touching this heritage, our worldliness must
answer to and for those other primate beings, both in their ordinary
habitats and in labs, television and film studios, and zoos. Also, the bio-
logical colonizing opportunism of organisms, from the glowing but in-
visible viruses and bacteria to the crown of ferns on top of this pooch’s
head, is palpable in the touch. Biological species diversity and all that asks
in our time come with this found dog.
In this camera-begot canid’s haptic–optic touch, we are inside the
histories of IT engineering, electronic product assembly-line labor, min-
ing and IT waste disposal, plastics research and manufacturing, transna-
tional markets, communications systems, and technocultural consumer
habits. The people and the things are in mutually constituting, intra-
active touch.5 Visually and tactically, I am in the presence of the intersec-
tional race-, sex-, age-, class-, and region-differentiated systems of labor
that made Jim’s dog live. Response seems the least that is required in this
kind of worldliness.
This dog could not have come to me without the leisure-time prom-
enading practices of the early twenty-first century in a university town on
the central California coast. Those urban walking pleasures touch the
labor practices of late nineteenth-century loggers who, without chain-
saws, cut the tree whose burned stump took on a postarboreal life. Where
did the lumber from that tree go? The historically deliberate firing by the
loggers or the lightning-caused fires in dry-season California carved Jim’s
dog from the tree’s blackened remains. Indebted to the histories of both
environmentalism and class, the greenbelt policies of California cities
resisting the fate of Silicon Valley ensured that Jim’s dog was not bull-
dozed for housing at the western edge of real-estate hungry Santa Cruz.
The water-eroded and earthquake-sculpted ruggedness of the canyons
helped too. The same civic policies and earth histories also allow cougars
to stroll down from the campus woodlands through the brushy canyons
defining this part of town. Walking with my furry dogs off leash in these
canyons makes me think about these possible feline presences. I reclip the
leashes. Visually fingering Jim’s dog involves touching all the important
ecological and political histories and struggles of ordinary small cities that
have asked, Who should eat whom, and who should cohabit? The rich
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 7
naturalcultural contact zones multiply with each tactile look. Jim’s dog is
a provocation to curiosity, which I regard as one of the first obligations
and deepest pleasures of worldly companion species.6
Jim’s seeing the mutt in the first place was an act of friendship from
a man who had not sought dogs in his life and for whom they had not
been particularly present before his colleague seemed to think about and
respond to little else. Furry dogs were not the ones who then came to
him, but another sort of canid quite as wonderful dogged his path. As
my informants in U.S. dog culture would say, Jim’s is a real dog, a one-off,
like a fine mixed-ancestry dog who could never be replicated but must be
encountered. Surely, there is no question about the mixed and myriad
ancestors, as well as contemporaries, in this encrusted charcoal dog. I
think this is what Alfred North Whitehead might have meant by a con-
crescence of prehensions.7 It is definitely at the heart of what I learn when
I ask whom I touch when I touch a dog. I learn something about how to
inherit in the flesh. Woof . . .
Leonardo’s dog hardly needs an introduction. Painted between
and , da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man, the Man of Perfect Proportions, has
paved his way in the imaginations of technoculture and canine pet culture
alike. Sydney Harris’s cartoon of Man’s celebrated canine compan-
ion mimes a figure that has come to mean Renaissance humanism; to
mean modernity; to mean the generative tie of art, science, technology,
genius, progress, and money. I cannot count the number of times da
Vinci’s Vitruvian Man appeared in the conference brochures for genomics
meetings or advertisements for molecular biological instruments and lab
reagents in the s. The only close competitors for illustrations and
ads were Vesalius’s anatomical drawings of dissected human figures and
Michelangelo’s Creation of Adam from the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.8
High Art, High Science: genius, progress, beauty, power, money. The
Man of Perfect Proportions brings both the number magic and the real-
life organic ubiquity of the Fibonacci sequence to the fore. Transmuted
into the form of his master, the Dog of Perfect Proportions helps me
think about why this preeminently humanist figure cannot work for the
kind of autre-mondialisation I seek with earthly companions in the way
that Jim’s dog does. Harris’s cartoon is funny, but laughter is not enough.
Leonardo’s dog is the companion species for technohumanism and its
8 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS
That brings us to the more usual encounters of dogs and cyborgs, in
which their supposed enmity is onstage. Dan Piraro’s Bizarro Sunday
cartoon from caught the rules of engagement perfectly. Welcoming
the attendees, the small dog keynote speaker at the American Association
of Lapdogs points to the illuminated slide of an open laptop computer,
solemnly intoning, “Ladies and Gentlemen. . . behold the enemy!” The
pun that simultaneously joins and separates lapdogs and laptops is won-
derful, and it opens a world of inquiry. A real dog person might first
ask how capacious human laps can actually be for holding even sizable
pooches and a computer at the same time. That sort of question tends
to arise in the late afternoon in a home office if a human being is still at
the computer and neglecting important obligations to go for a walk with
the effectively importuning beast-no-longer-on-the-floor. However, more
philosophically weighty, if not more practically urgent, questions also lurk
in this Bizarro cartoon.
Modernist versions of humanism and posthumanism alike have
taproots in a series of what Bruno Latour calls the Great Divides between
what counts as nature and as society, as nonhuman and as human.10
Whelped in the Great Divides, the principal Others to Man, including
his “posts,” are well documented in ontological breed registries in both
I heard at the session thought the guy was slightly dangerous and defi-
nitely politically embarrassing, but mainly crazy in the colloquial sense
if not the clinical. Nonetheless, the quasi-psychotic panic quality of the
man’s threatening remarks is worth some attention because of the way the
extreme shows the underside of the normal. In particular, this would-be
rapist-in-defense-of-mother-earth seems shaped by the culturally normal
fantasy of human exceptionalism. This is the premise that humanity
alone is not a spatial and temporal web of interspecies dependencies.
Thus, to be human is to be on the opposite side of the Great Divide from
all the others and so to be afraid of—and in bloody love with—what
goes bump in the night. The threatening man at the conference was well
marinated in the institutionalized, long dominant Western fantasy that
all that is fully human is fallen from Eden, separated from the mother,
in the domain of the artificial, deracinated, alienated, and therefore free.
For this man, the way out of his culture’s deep commitments to human
exceptionalism requires a one-way rapture to the other side of the divide.
To return to the mother is to return to nature and stand against Man-
the-Destroyer, by advocating the rape of women scientists at Monsanto,
if available, or of a traitorous keynote environmentalist feminist, if one is
on the spot.
Freud is our great theorist of panics of the Western psyche, and
because of Derrida’s commitment to track down “the whole anthro-
pomorphic reinstitution of the superiority of the human order over the
animal order, of the law over the living,” he is my guide to Freud’s ap-
proach on this question.12 Freud described three great historical wounds
to the primary narcissism of the self-centered human subject, who tries to
hold panic at bay by the fantasy of human exceptionalism. First is the
Copernican wound that removed Earth itself, man’s home world, from
the center of the cosmos and indeed paved the way for that cosmos to
burst open into a universe of inhumane, nonteleological times and spaces.
Science made that decentering cut. The second wound is the Darwinian,
which put Homo sapiens firmly in the world of other critters, all trying
to make an earthly living and so evolving in relation to one another with-
out the sureties of directional signposts that culminate in Man.13 Science
inflicted that cruel cut too. The third wound is the Freudian, which
posited an unconscious that undid the primacy of conscious processes,
12 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
including the reason that comforted Man with his unique excellence, with
dire consequences for teleology once again. Science seems to hold that
blade too. I want to add a fourth wound, the informatic or cyborgian,
which infolds organic and technological flesh and so melds that Great
Divide as well.
Is it any wonder that in every other election cycle the Kansas Board
of Education wants this stuff out of the science text books, even if almost
all of modern science has to go to accomplish this suturing of rending
wounds to the coherence of a fantastic, but well-endowed, being? Noto-
riously, in the last decade voters in Kansas elected opponents of teaching
Darwinian evolution to the state board in one election and then replaced
them in the next cycle with what the press calls moderates.14 Kansas is
not exceptional; it figured more than half the public in the United States
in .15 Freud knew Darwinism is not moderate, and a good thing
too. Doing without both teleology and human exceptionalism is, in my
opinion, essential to getting laptops and lapdogs into one lap. More to
the point, these wounds to self-certainty are necessary, if not yet suffi-
cient, to no longer easily uttering the sentence in any domain, “Ladies and
gentlemen, behold the enemy!” Instead, I want my people, those collected
by figures of mortal relatedness, to go back to that old political button
from the late s, “Cyborgs for earthly survival,” joined to my newer
bumper sticker from Bark magazine, “Dog is my co-pilot.” Both critters
ride the earth on the back of the Darwin fish.16
That cyborg and dog come together in the next professional meet-
ing in these introductions. A few years ago, Faye Ginsburg, an eminent
anthropologist and filmmaker and the daughter of Benson Ginsburg, a
pioneering student of canine behavior, sent me a cartoon by Warren
Miller from the March , , New Yorker. Faye’s childhood had been
spent with the wolves her father studied in his lab at the University
of Chicago and the animals at the Jackson Memorial Laboratories in Bar
Harbor, Maine, where J. P. Scott and J. L. Fuller also carried out their
famous inquiries into dog genetics and social behavior from the late
s.17 In the cartoon a member of a wild wolf pack introduces a con-
specific visitor wearing an electronic communications pack, complete with
an antenna for sending and receiving data, with the words, “We found
her wandering at the edge of the forest. She was raised by scientists.” A
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 13
Warren Miller, from CartoonBank.com. Copyright The New Yorker collection, 1993. All
rights reserved.
14 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
COMPANION SPECIES
Ms Cayenne Pepper continues to colonize all my cells—a sure case of
what the biologist Lynn Margulis calls symbiogenesis. I bet if you were
to check our DNA, you’d find some potent transfections between us. Her
saliva must have the viral vectors. Surely, her darter-tongue kisses have
been irresistible. Even though we share placement in the phylum of ver-
tebrates, we inhabit not just different genera and divergent families but
altogether different orders.
How would we sort things out? Canid, hominid; pet, professor;
bitch, woman; animal, human; athlete, handler. One of us has a microchip
injected under her neck skin for identification; the other has a photo ID
California driver’s license. One of us has a written record of her ancestors
for twenty generations; one of us does not know her great grandparents’
names. One of us, product of a vast genetic mixture, is called “purebred.”
One of us, equally a product of a vast mixture, is called “white.” Each of
these names designates a different racial discourse, and we both inherit
their consequences in our flesh.
One of us is at the cusp of flaming, youthful, physical achievement;
the other is lusty but over the hill. And we play a team sport called agility
16 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
In my experience, when people hear the term companion species, they tend
to start talking about “companion animals,” such as dogs, cats, horses,
miniature donkeys, tropical fish, fancy bunnies, dying baby turtles, ant
farms, parrots, tarantulas in harness, and Vietnamese potbellied pigs.
Many of those critters, but far from all and none without very noninno-
cent histories, do fit readily into the early twenty-first-century globalized
and flexible category of companion animals. Historically situated animals
in companionate relations with equally situated humans are, of course,
major players in When Species Meet. But the category “companion spe-
cies” is less shapely and more rambunctious than that. Indeed, I find that
notion, which is less a category than a pointer to an ongoing “becoming
with,” to be a much richer web to inhabit than any of the posthumanisms
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 17
mediated gene transfers redo kin and kind at rates and in patterns un-
precedented on earth, generating messmates at table who do not know
how to eat well and, in my judgment, often should not be guests together
at all. Which companion species will, and should, live and die, and how,
is at stake.
The word species also structures conservation and environmental
discourses, with their “endangered species” that function simultaneously
to locate value and to evoke death and extinction in ways familiar in colo-
nial representations of the always vanishing indigene. The discursive tie
between the colonized, the enslaved, the noncitizen, and the animal—all
reduced to type, all Others to rational man, and all essential to his bright
constitution—is at the heart of racism and flourishes, lethally, in the en-
trails of humanism. Woven into that tie in all the categories is “woman’s”
putative self-defining responsibility to “the species,” as this singular and
typological female is reduced to her reproductive function. Fecund, she
lies outside the bright territory of man even as she is his conduit. The
labeling of African American men in the United States as an “endangered
species” makes palpable the ongoing animalization that fuels liberal and
conservative racialization alike. Species reeks of race and sex; and where
and when species meet, that heritage must be untied and better knots of
companion species attempted within and across differences. Loosening the
grip of analogies that issue in the collapse of all of man’s others into one
another, companion species must instead learn to live intersectionally.22
Raised a Roman Catholic, I grew up knowing that the Real Pres-
ence was present under both “species,” the visible form of the bread and
the wine. Sign and flesh, sight and food, never came apart for me again
after seeing and eating that hearty meal. Secular semiotics never nour-
ished as well or caused as much indigestion. That fact made me ready to
learn that species is related to spice. A kind of atom or molecule, spe-
cies is also a composition used in embalming. “The species” often means
the human race, unless one is attuned to science fiction, where species
abound.23 It would be a mistake to assume much about species in ad-
vance of encounter. Finally, we come to metal coinage, “specie,” stamped
in the proper shape and kind. Like company, species also signifies and
embodies wealth. I remember Marx on the topic of gold, alert to all its
filth and glitter.
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 19
being that one day enters my space, enters this place where it can en-
counter me, see me, see me naked” (–). He identified the key ques-
tion as being not whether the cat could “speak” but whether it is possible
to know what respond means and how to distinguish a response from a
reaction, for human beings as well as for anyone else. He did not fall
into the trap of making the subaltern speak: “It would not be a matter of
‘giving speech back’ to animals but perhaps acceding to a thinking . . . that
thinks the absence of the name as something other than a privation”
(). Yet he did not seriously consider an alternative form of engagement
either, one that risked knowing something more about cats and how to
look back, perhaps even scientifically, biologically, and therefore also philo-
sophically and intimately.
He came right to the edge of respect, of the move to respecere, but
he was sidetracked by his textual canon of Western philosophy and liter-
ature and by his own linked worries about being naked in front of his cat.
He knew there is no nudity among animals, that the worry was his, even
as he understood the fantastic lure of imagining he could write naked
words. Somehow in all this worrying and longing, the cat was never heard
from again in the long essay dedicated to the crime against animals per-
petrated by the great Singularities separating the Animal and the Human
in the canon Derrida so passionately read and reread so that it could
never be read the same way again.26 For those readings I and my people
are permanently in his debt.
But with his cat, Derrida failed a simple obligation of companion
species; he did not become curious about what the cat might actually be
doing, feeling, thinking, or perhaps making available to him in looking
back at him that morning. Derrida is among the most curious of men,
among the most committed and able of philosophers to spot what arrests
curiosity, instead nurturing an entanglement and a generative interrup-
tion called response. Derrida is relentlessly attentive to and humble before
what he does not know. Besides all that, his own deep interest in animals
is coextensive with his practice as a philosopher. The textual evidence is
ubiquitous. What happened that morning was, to me, shocking because
of what I know this philosopher can do. Incurious, he missed a possible
invitation, a possible introduction to other-worlding. Or, if he was curi-
ous when he first really noticed his cat looking at him that morning, he
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 21
Leaving this query unasked, he had nowhere else to go with his keen
recognition of the gaze of his cat than to Jeremy Bentham’s question:
“The first and decisive question will rather be to know whether animals
can suffer. . . . Once its protocol is established, the form of this question
changes everything” (). I would not for a minute deny the importance
of the question of animals’ suffering and the criminal disregard of it
throughout human orders, but I do not think that is the decisive ques-
tion, the one that turns the order of things around, the one that promises
an autre-mondialisation. The question of suffering led Derrida to the
virtue of pity, and that is not a small thing. But how much more promise
is in the questions, Can animals play? Or work? And even, can I learn to
play with this cat? Can I, the philosopher, respond to an invitation or rec-
ognize one when it is offered? What if work and play, and not just pity,
open up when the possibility of mutual response, without names, is taken
seriously as an everyday practice available to philosophy and to science?
What if a usable word for this is joy? And what if the question of how ani-
mals engage one another’s gaze responsively takes center stage for people?
What if that is the query, once its protocol is properly established, whose
form changes everything?27 My guess is that Derrida the man in the bath-
room grasped all this, but Derrida the philosopher had no idea how to
practice this sort of curiosity that morning with his highly visual cat.
Therefore, as a philosopher he knew nothing more from, about, and
with the cat at the end of the morning than he knew at the beginning, no
matter how much better he understood the root scandal as well as the
enduring achievements of his textual legacy. Actually to respond to the
cat’s response to his presence would have required his joining that flawed
but rich philosophical canon to the risky project of asking what this cat
on this morning cared about, what these bodily postures and visual en-
tanglements might mean and might invite, as well as reading what people
who study cats have to say and delving into the developing knowledges
of both cat–cat and cat–human behavioral semiotics when species meet.
Instead, he concentrated on his shame in being naked before this cat.
Shame trumped curiosity, and that does not bode well for an autre-
mondialisation. Knowing that in the gaze of the cat was “an existence
that refuses to be conceptualized,” Derrida did not “go on as if he had
never been looked at,” never addressed, which was the fundamental gaffe
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 23
are the smallest possible patterns for analysis;31 the partners and actors
are their still-ongoing products. It is all extremely prosaic, relentlessly
mundane, and exactly how worlds come into being.32
Smuts herself holds a theory very like this one in “Embodied Com-
munication in Nonhuman Animals,” a reprise of her study of the
Eburru Cliffs baboons and elaboration of daily, ongoing negotiated re-
sponses between herself and her dog Bahati.33 In this study, Smuts is
struck by the frequent enactments of brief greeting rituals between beings
who know each other well, such as between baboons in the same troop
and between herself and Bahati. Among baboons, both friends and non-
friends greet one another all the time, and who they are is in constant
becoming in these rituals. Greeting rituals are flexible and dynamic, re-
arranging pace and elements within the repertoire that the partners already
share or can cobble together. Smuts defines a greeting ritual as a kind of
embodied communication, which takes place in entwined, semiotic, over-
lapping, somatic patterning over time, not as discrete, denotative signals
emitted by individuals. An embodied communication is more like a dance
than a word. The flow of entangled meaningful bodies in time—whether
jerky and nervous or flaming and flowing, whether both partners move in
harmony or painfully out of synch or something else altogether—is com-
munication about relationship, the relationship itself, and the means of
reshaping relationship and so its enacters.34 Gregory Bateson would say
that this is what human and nonhuman mammalian nonlinguistic com-
munication fundamentally is, that is, communication about relationship
and the material–semiotic means of relating.35 As Smuts puts it, “Changes
in greetings are a change in the relationship” (). She goes further: “With
language, it is possible to lie and say we like someone when we don’t.
However, if the above speculations are correct, closely interacting bodies
tend to tell the truth” ().
This is a very interesting definition of truth, one rooted in material–
semiotic dancing in which all the partners have face, but no one relies on
names. That kind of truth does not fit easily into any of the inherited
categories of human or nonhuman, nature or culture. I like to think that
this is one treasure for Derrida’s hunt to “think the absence of the name
as something other than a privation.” I suspect this is one of the things
my fellow competitors and I in the dog–human sport called agility mean
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 27
when we say our dogs are “honest.” I am certain we are not referring to the
tired philosophical and linguistic arguments about whether dogs can lie,
and if so, lie about lying. The truth or honesty of nonlinguistic embodied
communication depends on looking back and greeting significant others,
again and again. This sort of truth or honesty is not some trope-free,
fantastic kind of natural authenticity that only animals can have while
humans are defined by the happy fault of lying denotatively and knowing
it. Rather, this truth telling is about co-constitutive naturalcultural dancing,
holding in esteem, and regard open to those who look back reciprocally.
Always tripping, this kind of truth has a multispecies future. Respecere.
into this encounter. No earthly animal would look twice at these authors,
at least not in their textual garb in this chapter.
A Thousand Plateaus is a part of the writers’ sustained work against
the monomaniacal, cyclopean, individuated Oedipal subject, who is riv-
eted on daddy and lethal in culture, politics, and philosophy. Patrilineal
thinking, which sees all the world as a tree of filiations ruled by genealogy
and identity, wars with rhizomatic thinking, which is open to nonhierar-
chical becomings and contagions. So far, so good. Deleuze and Guattari
sketch a quick history of European ideas from eighteenth-century natural
history (relations recognized through proportionality and resemblance,
series and structure), through evolutionism (relations ordered through
descent and filiation), to becomings (relations patterned through “sorcery”
or alliance). “Becoming is always of a different order than filiation. It
concerns alliance” (). The normal and abnormal rule in evolutionism;
the anomaly, which is outside rules, is freed in the lines of flight of be-
comings. “Molar unities” must give way to “molecular multiplicities.” “The
anomalous is neither individual nor species; it has only affects, infections,
horror . . . a phenomenon of bordering” (–). And then, “We oppose
epidemic to filiation, contagion to heredity, peopling by contagion to sex-
ual reproduction, sexual production. Bands, human or animal, proliferate
by contagion, epidemics, battlefields, and catastrophes. . . . All we are say-
ing is that animals are packs, and packs form, develop, and are trans-
formed by contagion. . . . Wherever there is multiplicity, you will find also
an exceptional individual, and it is with that individual that an alliance
must be made in order to become-animal” (–). This is a philosophy
of the sublime, not the earthly, not the mud; becoming-animal is not an
autre-mondialisation.
Earlier in A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari conducted a
smart, mean critique of Freud’s analysis of the famous case of the Wolf-
Man, in which their opposition of dog and wolf gave me the key to how
D&G’s associational web of anomalous becoming-animal feeds off a
series of primary dichotomies figured by the opposition between the wild
and the domestic. “That day the Wolf-Man rose from the couch particu-
larly tired. He knew that Freud had a genius for brushing up against the
truth and passing it by, and then filling the void with associations. He
knew that Freud knew nothing about wolves, or anuses for that matter.
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 29
The only thing Freud understood was what a dog is, and a dog’s tail” ().
This gibe is the first of a crowd of oppositions of dog and wolf in A Thou-
sand Plateaus, which taken together are a symptomatic morass for how not
to take earthly animals—wild or domestic—seriously. In honor of Freud’s
famously irascible chows, no doubt sleeping on the floor during the Wolf-
Man’s sessions, I brace myself to go on by studying the artist David
Goines’s Chinese Year of the Dog poster for : one of the most gor-
geous chow chows I have ever seen. Indifferent to the charms of a blue-
purple tongue, D&G knew how to kick the psychoanalyst where it would
hurt, but they had no eye for the elegant curve of a good chow’s tail, much
less the courage to look such a dog in the eye.
But the wolf/dog opposition is not funny. D&G express horror
at the “individuated animals, family pets, sentimental Oedipal animals
each with its own petty history” who invite only regression ().37 All
worthy animals are a pack; all the rest are either pets of the bourgeoisie
or state animals symbolizing some kind of divine myth.38 The pack, or
pure-affect animals, are intensive, not extensive, molecular and excep-
tional, not petty and molar—sublime wolf packs, in short. I don’t think it
needs comment that we will learn nothing about actual wolves in all this.
I know that D&G set out to write not a biological treatise but rather a
philosophical, psychoanalytic, and literary one requiring different reading
habits for the always nonmimetic play of life and narrative. But no read-
ing strategies can mute the scorn for the homely and the ordinary in this
book. Leaving behind the traps of singularity and identity is possible
without the lubrication of sublime ecstasy bordering on the intensive
affect of the Futurist Manifesto. D&G continue, “Anyone who likes
cats or dogs is a fool” (, italics in original). I don’t think Deleuze here
is thinking of Dostoevsky’s idiot, who slows things down and whom
Deleuze loves. D&G go on: Freud knows only the “dog in the kennel, the
analyst’s bow wow.” Never have I felt more loyal to Freud. D&G go even
further in their disdain for the daily, the ordinary, the affectional rather
than the sublime. The Unique, the one in a pact with a demon, the sor-
cerer’s anomaly, is both pack and Ahab’s leviathan in Moby Dick, the
exceptional, not in the sense of a competent and skillful animal webbed
in the open with others, but in the sense of what is without characteris-
tics and without tenderness (). From the point of view of the animal
30 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
worlds I inhabit, this is not about a good run but about a bad trip. Along
with the Beatles, I need a little more help than that from my friends.
Little house dogs and the people who love them are the ultimate
figure of abjection for D&G, especially if those people are elderly women,
the very type of the sentimental. “Ahab’s Moby Dick is not like the little
cat or dog owned by an elderly woman who honors and cherishes it.
Lawrence’s becoming-tortoise has nothing to do with a sentimental or
domestic relation. . . . But the objection is raised against Lawrence:
‘Your tortoises are not real!’ And he answers: ‘Possibly, but my becom-
ing is, . . . even and especially if you have no way of judging it, because
you’re just little house dogs’” (). “My becoming” seems awfully im-
portant in a theory opposed to the strictures of individuation and sub-
ject. The old, female, small, dog- and cat-loving: these are who and what
must be vomited out by those who will become-animal. Despite the
keen competition, I am not sure I can find in philosophy a clearer dis-
play of misogyny, fear of aging, incuriosity about animals, and horror
at the ordinariness of flesh, here covered by the alibi of an anti-Oedipal
and anticapitalist project. It took some nerve for D&G to write about
becoming-woman just a few pages later! (–).39 It is almost enough
to make me go out and get a toy poodle for my next agility dog; I know a
remarkable one playing with her human for the World Cup these days.
That is exceptional.
It is a relief to return from my own flights of fancy of becoming-
intense in the agility World Cup competitions to the mud and the slime
of my proper home world, where my biological soul travels with that
wolf found near the edge of the forest who was raised by scientists.
At least as many nonarboreal shapes of relatedness can be found in
these not-always-salubrious viscous fluids as among Deleuze and Guat-
tari’s rhizomatic anomalies. Playing in the mud, I can even appreciate
a great deal of A Thousand Plateaus. Companion species are familiar
with oddly shaped figures of kin and kind, in which arboreal descent is
both a latecomer to the play of bodies and never uniquely in charge of
the material–semiotic action. In their controversial theory of Acquiring
Genomes, Lynn Margulis and her son and collaborator, Dorion Sagan,
give me the flesh and figures that companion species need to understand
their messmates.40
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 31
Reading Margulis over the years, I get the idea that she believes
everything interesting on earth happened among the bacteria, and all the
rest is just elaboration, most certainly including wolf packs. Bacteria pass
genes back and forth all the time and do not resolve into well-bounded
species, giving the taxonomist either an ecstatic moment or a headache.
“The creative force of symbiosis produced eukaryotic cells from bacteria.
Hence all larger organisms—protests, fungi, animals, and plants—origi-
nated symbiogenetically. But creation of novelty by symbiosis did not end
with the evolution of the earliest nucleated cells. Symbiosis still is every-
where” (–). Margulis and Sagan give examples from Pacific coral
reefs, squid and their luminescent symbionts, New England lichens, milk
cows, and New Guinea ant plants, among others. The basic story is sim-
ple: ever more complex life forms are the continual result of ever more
intricate and multidirectional acts of association of and with other life
forms. Trying to make a living, critters eat critters but can only partly
digest one another. Quite a lot of indigestion, not to mention excretion,
is the natural result, some of which is the vehicle for new sorts of com-
plex patternings of ones and manys in entangled association. And some
of that indigestion and voiding are just acidic reminders of mortality
made vivid in the experience of pain and systemic breakdown, from the
lowliest among us to the most eminent. Organisms are ecosystems of
genomes, consortia, communities, partly digested dinners, mortal bound-
ary formations. Even toy dogs and fat old ladies on city streets are such
boundary formations; studying them “ecologically” would show it.
Eating one another and developing indigestion are only one kind of
transformative merger practice; living critters form consortia in a baroque
medley of inter- and intra-actions. Margulis and Sagan put it more elo-
quently when they write that to be an organism is to be the fruit of
“the co-opting of strangers, the involvement and infolding of others into
ever more complex and miscegenous genomes. . . . The acquisition of the
reproducing other, of the microbe and the genome, is no mere sideshow.
Attraction, merger, fusion, incorporation, co-habitation, recombination—
both permanent and cyclical—and other forms of forbidden couplings,
are the main sources of Darwin’s missing variation” (). Yoking to-
gether all the way down is what sym-bio-genesis means. The shape
and temporality of life on earth are more like a liquid–crystal consortium
32 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
not the sheep) for publication. But good scientists have a way of nibbling
away at prejudice with mutated questions and lovely data, which works
at least sometimes.48 Scottish blackface hill sheep, Rowell’s numerically
dominant ovine neighbors in Lancashire, and the lowland Dorset white-
faced breed, mostly on the English Downs, seem to have forgotten how
to testify to a great deal of sheep competence. They and their equivalents
around the world are the sorts of ovids most familiar to the sheep ex-
perts reviewing papers for the journals—at least for the journals in which
sheep usually show up, that is, not the behavioral ecology, integrative
biology, and evolution journals in which nondomestic species seem the
“natural” subjects of attention. But in the context of the ranching and
farming practices that led to today’s global agribusiness, maybe those
“domestic” ovine eating machines are rarely asked an interesting question.
Not brought into the open with their people, and so with no experience
of jointly becoming available, these sheep do not “become with” a curi-
ous scientist.
There is a disarmingly literal quality to having truck with Rowell
and her critters. Rowell brings her competent sheep into the yard most
days so that she can ask them some more questions while they snack.
There, the twenty-two sheep find twenty-three bowls spaced around the
yard. That homely twenty-third bowl is the open,49 the space of what is
not yet and may or may not ever be; it is a making available to events; it
is asking the sheep and the scientists to be smart in their exchanges by
making it possible for something unexpected to happen. Rowell practices
the virtue of worldly politeness—not a particularly gentle art—with her
colleagues and her sheep, just as she used to do with her primate subjects.
“Interesting research is research on the conditions that make something
interesting.”50 Always having a bowl that is not occupied provides an extra
place to go for any sheep displaced by his or her socially assertive fellow
ovid. Rowell’s approach is deceptively simple. Competition is so easy to
see; eating is so readily observed and of such consuming interest to farm-
ers. What else might be happening? Might what is not so easy to learn to
see be what is of the utmost importance to the sheep in their daily doings
and their evolutionary history? Might it be that thinking again about the
history of predation and the smart predilections of prey will tell us some-
thing surprising and important about ovine worlds even on Lancashire
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 35
hillsides, or on islands off the coast of Scotland, where a wolf has not been
seen for centuries?
Always a maverick alert to complexity in its details rather than in
grand pronouncements, Rowell regularly discomfited her human col-
leagues when she studied monkeys, beginning with her s accounts of
forest baboons in Uganda who did not act according to their supposed
species script.51 Rowell is among the most satisfyingly opinionated, em-
pirically grounded, theoretically savvy, unself-impressed, and unsparingly
anti-ideological people I have ever met. Forgetting her head-over-heels
interest in her sheep, seeing her patent love for her obstreperous male
adolescent turkeys on her Lancashire farm in , whom she uncon-
vincingly threatened with untimely slaughter for their misdeeds,52 told
me a great deal about how she treats both unwary human colleagues
and the opinionated animals whom she has studied over a lifetime. As
Vinciane Despret emphasizes in her study, Rowell poses the question of
the collective in relation to both sheep and people: “Do we prefer living
with predictable sheep or with sheep that surprise us and that add to our
definitions of what ‘being social’ means?”53 This is a fundamental worldly
question, or what Despret’s colleague Isabelle Stengers might call a cosmo-
political query, in which “the cosmos refers to the unknown constituted
by these multiple divergent worlds, and to the articulations of which they
could eventually be capable, as opposed to the temptation of a peace
intended to be final.”54 Eating lunch with the circa sixty-five-year-old
Rowell and her elderly, cherished, nonherding, pet dog in her farmhouse
kitchen strewn with scientific papers and heterogeneous books, my would-
be ethnographic self had the distinct sense that Oedipal regression was
not on the menu among these companion species. Woolf!
and security discourse worlds, with their criminality and terrorist appa-
ratuses; the actual lives and deaths of differentially situated human beings
and animals shaped by these knots; contending popular and professional
narratives about wolves and dogs and their consequences for who lives
and dies and how; the coshaped histories of human social welfare and
animal welfare organizations; the class-saturated funding apparatuses of
private and public animal–human worlds; the development of the cate-
gories to contain those, human and nonhuman, who are disposable and
killable; the inextricable tie between North America and South Africa in
all these matters; and the stories and actual practices that continue to pro-
duce wolf–dog hybrids in unlivable knots, even on a romping-dog beach
in Santa Cruz, California. Curiosity gets one into thick mud, but I believe
that is the kind of “looking back” and “becoming-with-companions” that
might matter in making autres-mondialisations more possible.
Heading to the Golan Heights after running with the wolves in
South Africa is hardly restful. Among the last companion-species knots
in which I imagined living was one that in featured Israeli cowboys
in occupied Syrian territory riding kibbutz horses to manage their Euro-
pean-style cattle among the ruins of Syrian villages and military bases.
All I have is a snapshot, one newspaper article in the midst of an ongoing
complex, bloody, and tragic history.57 That snapshot was enough to reshape
my sense of touch while playing with my dogs. The first cattle-ranching
kibbutz was founded shortly after ; by about seventeen thou-
sand Israelis in thirty-three various sorts of settlements held the territory,
pending removal by an ever-receding peace treaty with Syria. Learning
their new skills on the job, the neophyte ranchers share the land with the
Israeli military and their tanks. Mine fields still pose dangers for cattle,
horses, and people, and firing-range practice vies with grazing for space.
The cattle are guarded from the resourceful Syrian wolves, not to men-
tion Syrian people periodically repatriating stock, by large white livestock
guardian dogs (LGDs), namely, Turkish Akbash dogs. Turkey does play
an odd role in the Middle East! With the dogs on duty, the ranchers
do not shoot the wolves. Nothing was said in this Times article about
whether they shoot the Syrian “rustlers.” The cattle that the Israelis took
over after the expulsion of the Syrian villagers were small, wiry, capable
in the same kinds of ways as Rowell’s nonsheepish sheep, and resistant to
WHEN SPECIES MEET d 39
the local tick-borne diseases. The European cattle who were imported to
replace the supposedly unmodern Syrian beasts are none of those things.
The Israeli ranchers brought the guardian dogs into their operation in
the s in response to the large number of gray wolves, whose number
on the Golan Heights grew significantly after the defeat of Syria in
reduced the Arab villagers’ hunting pressure on them.
The Akbash dogs were the prosaic touch that made the story in the
newspaper of more than passing interest in the huge canvas of fraught
naturecultures and war in the Middle East. I was a kind of “godhuman” to
Willem, a Great Pyrenees livestock guardian dog who worked on land in
California that my family owns with a friend. Willem, his human, Susan,
and his breeder and her health and genetics activist peers in dogland have
been major informants for this book. Willem’s livestock guardian dog
people are astute participants in the hotly contested dog–wolf–rancher–
herbivore–environmentalist–hunter naturecultures of the contemporary
U.S. northern Rocky Mountain region. Willem and my dog Cayenne
played as puppies and added to the stock of the world’s joy.58 This is all
quite small and unexceptional—not much of a “line of flight” to delight
Deleuze and Guattari here. But it was enough to hail me and maybe us
into curiosity about the naturalcultural politics of wolves, dogs, cattle,
ticks, pathogens, tanks, mine fields, soldiers, displaced villagers, cattle
thieves, and settlers become cowboy-style ranchers on still another bit
of earth made into a frontier by war, expulsion, occupation, the history of
genocides, and ramifying insecurity all around. There is no happy ending
to offer, no conclusion to this ongoing entanglement, only a sharp re-
minder that anywhere one really looks actual living wolves and dogs are
waiting to guide humans into contested worldings. “We found her at the
edge of the city; she was raised by wolves.” Like her forest-immigrant
cousin, this wolf wore a communications pack that was no stranger to the
development of military technology for command, control, communica-
tion, and intelligence.
Of course, by the first decade of the new millennium, that kind of
telecommunications pack could be ordinary equipment for day walkers in
the mountains, and that is where these introductions will end, but with
the printed word rather than a personal GPS system situating the hiker.
In primatologist Allison Jolly, knowing my livestock-guardian-dog
40 d WHEN SPECIES MEET
questions of who belongs where and what flourishing means for whom.
Following the dogs and their herbivores and people in order to respond
to those questions attaches me again and again to ranching, farming, and
eating. In principle if not always in personal and collective action, it is easy
to know that factory farming and its sciences and politics must be undone.
But what then? How can food security for everybody (not just for the rich,
who can forget how important cheap and abundant food is) and multi-
species’ coflourishing be linked in practice? How can remembering the con-
quest of the western states by Anglo settlers and their plants and animals
become part of the solution and not another occasion for the pleasurable
and individualizing frisson of guilt? Much collaborative and inventive
work is under way on these matters, if only we take touch seriously. Both
vegan and nonvegan community food projects with a local and translocal
analysis have made clear the links among safe and fair working conditions
for people, physically and behaviorally healthy agricultural animals, genetic
and other research directed to health and diversity, urban and rural food
security, and enhanced wildlife habitat.59 No easy unity is to be found
on these matters, and no answers will make one feel good for long. But
those are not the goals of companion species. Rather, there are vastly more
attachment sites for participating in the search for more livable “other
worlds” (autres-mondialisations) inside earthly complexity than one could
ever have imagined when first reaching out to pet one’s dog.
The kinds of relatings that these introductions perform entangle
a motley crowd of differentially situated species, including landscapes,
animals, plants, microorganisms, people, and technologies. Sometimes a
polite introduction brings together two quasi-individuated beings, maybe
even with personal names printed in major newspapers, whose histo-
ries can recall comfortable narratives of subjects in encounter, two by
two. More often, the configurations of critters have other patterns more
reminiscent of a cat’s cradle game of the sort taken for granted by good
ecologists, military strategists, political economists, and ethnographers.
Whether grasped two-by-two or tangle-by-tangle, attachment sites needed
for meeting species redo everything they touch. The point is not to cele-
brate complexity but to become worldly and to respond. Considering
still live metaphors for this work, John Law and Annemarie Mol help
me think: “Multiplicity, oscillation, mediation, material heterogeneity,
42 d WHEN SPECIES MEET