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Feral children
feral children, also called wild children, children who, through either
accident or deliberate isolation, have grown up with limited human contact.
Such children have often been seen as inhabiting a boundary zone between
human and animal existence; for this reason the motif of the child reared by
animals is a recurring theme in myth. In the modern era, feral children have
been seen as providing a window for the scientific study of fundamental
human traits such as language use. During the 20th century, as psychologists
endeavored to distinguish between behaviorism and biological nature, wild
children—a designation including children in isolation as well as those who
survived among animals—again seemed
Before the 17th century, outside of myth and legend, only scattered and
fragmented stories of feral or wild children appear in European history.
Suddenly, during the 1600s, several accounts emerge; there are descriptions of
a wolf boy in Germany and children abducted by bears in Poland; and, in
1644, the first story appears in English of John of Liège, a boy lost by his
parents in the woods who took on animal-like behaviors to survive on his own
for years. Early descriptions of such children detailed their nonhuman
qualities: running on all fours, foraging and hunting for food, exceptional
hearing, and absence of language. As several such children were rescued from
the wild and brought back into human society, their continued animalistic
behavior coupled with a seeming inability to master language fascinated
philosophers, who began to wonder if such children actually belonged to a
different species from the human family.
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Michelle Jarman
feral children, also called wild children, children who, through either accident or
deliberate isolation, have grown up with limited human contact. Such children have
often been seen as inhabiting a boundary zone between human and animal existence;
for this reason the motif of the child reared by animals is a recurring theme in myth. In
the modern era, feral children have been seen as providing a window for the scientific
study of fundamental human traits such as language use. During the 20th century, as
psychologists endeavored to distinguish between behaviorism and biological nature,
wild children—a designation including children in isolation as well as those who
survived among animals—again seemed to provide a key to the puzzle.
Before the 17th century, outside of myth and legend, only scattered and fragmented
stories of feral or wild children appear in European history. Suddenly, during the 1600s,
several accounts emerge; there are descriptions of a wolf boy in Germany and children
abducted by bears in Poland; and, in 1644, the first story appears in English of John
of Liège, a boy lost by his parents in the woods who took on animal-like behaviors to
survive on his own for years. Early descriptions of such children detailed their
nonhuman qualities: running on all fours, foraging and hunting for food, exceptional
hearing, and absence of language. As several such children were rescued from the wild
and brought back into human society, their continued animalistic behavior coupled with
a seeming inability to master language fascinated philosophers, who began to wonder if
such children actually belonged to a different species from the human family.
This question was taken up with great seriousness in the 18th and 19th centuries as
science attempted to name, classify, and understand the intricacies of the natural world
and human development. The most widely known feral child of the early 18th century
was a boy found near Hanover in 1725. Peter the Wild Boy—as the famous
physician John Arbuthnot named him—became a fascination of the English royalty,
living for the next few years with both King George I and the Prince of Wales. Like
earlier children found in the wilderness, Peter’s unbreakable silence and unique ability
to survive much as an animal would compelled scientists to address this animal-human
divide. Within a decade of Peter’s discovery, Carolus Linnaeus, the hugely influential
natural historian, actually included feral man, Homo ferens, as one of six distinct
human species. Notably, H. ferens is the only classification listing individuals—rather
than whole races—as examples.
In the 1792 translation of Linnaeus’s Natural Systems into English, however, a note was
added that such children were probably “idiots” who had been abandoned or had
strayed from their families. It was this conflation of feral nature and disability that was
taken up by Jean-Marc-Gaspard Itard in his project of civilizing one of the most famous
cases in Europe, Victor of Aveyron, a wild boy caught in 1800 in the forests near
Lacaune. Philippe Pinel, the foremost physician in France, dismissed Vl
Presently, most psychologists attribute the inability of such children to master language
to their unique histories of survival outside of human society—as a behavioral
mechanism specifically adapted to their environment and circumstances rather than a
biological inability. Fascination with wild children, however, remains, and the fates of
such children become deeply tied to the doctors, teachers, and caregivers who, through
measurement, diagnosis, training, and compassion, inevitably attempt to resocialize
these children and return them to the fold of human interaction.