Zoologies On animals and the human spirit

Alison Hawthorne Deming, 1946-

Book - 2014

"Humans were surrounded by other animals from the beginning of time: they were food, clothes, adversaries, companions, jokes, and gods. And yet, our companions in evolution are leaving the world - both as physical beings and spiritual symbols - and not returning. In this collection of linked essays, Alison Hawthorne Deming asks, and seeks to answer: what does the disappearance of animals mean for human imagination and existence? Moving from mammoth hunts to dying house cats, she explores profound questions about what it means to be animal. What is inherent in animals that leads us to destroy, and what that leads us toward peace? As human animals, how does art both define us as a species and how does it emerge primarily from our relatio...nship with other species? The reader emerges with a transformed sense of how the living world around us has defined and continues to define us in a powerful way"--

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Subjects
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Milkweed Editions 2014.
Language
English
Main Author
Alison Hawthorne Deming, 1946- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
256 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781571313485
  • Introduction
  • Murray Springs Mammoth
  • Spotted Hyena
  • The Sacred Pig
  • Crow
  • Dog Tags
  • Patativa (Sporophila leucoptera)
  • Ant Art
  • Field Notes on Hands
  • Elephant Watching
  • The Cheetah Run
  • The Finback
  • The Feasting
  • A Dog with His Pets
  • City of Storks
  • The Pony, the Pig, and the Horse
  • Dragon
  • Black Vulture
  • Liberating the Lobster
  • Trumpeter Swan
  • T. Rex
  • Bobcat
  • My Cat Jeffrey
  • Feral Children
  • Vervet
  • Chimera
  • Letter from Mars
  • Wolf Spider
  • Owl Watching in the Experimental Forest
  • Hood River Oyster
  • The Rabbit on Mars
  • Field Notes on Culture, Biology, and Emergence
  • Epilogue: The Gannet
  • Notes
  • For Further Reading
  • Acknowledgments
  • Publications
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Deming's poetry background is evident in this book of beautifully written essays on animal and human behavior and biology. She discusses the real and mythological, the ordinary and the exotic, the wild and the domesticated, and their interactions with humans. Deming reveals amazing facts about our companions on Earth, from storks that carry their aged parents to the genetic bottleneck of cheetahs that threatens their extinction. Sharing anecdotes from near and far, she weaves in stories of her travel experiences in Tanzania and Punta Chueca, Mexico, as well as animals she's observed from coast to desert. Deming's writing is both precise and intricate, allowing her to gracefully transition from natural history to memoir. She describes anthills as "little chemistry kits" and the work of "untrained artists." She reflects on her role as a poet who works in science, ruminating on language and the complexities of the natural world. Deming closes by considering our role in the environment, hoping that our "pathological culture" will change to greater awareness and, many years hence, a beautiful legacy. This articulate compilation is highly recommended for lovers of words and nature. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An award-winning essayist and poet contemplates the disappearance of the Earth's creatures and asks, "[w]hat do animals mean to the contemporary imagination?" Human beings live in an age in which industrialization and mass extinction are facts of life. But as Deming (Creative Writing/Univ. of Arizona; Rope, 2009, etc.) suggests in this collection, the more people denude the planet of animals, the more diminished they become in spirit. Humans may deny it, but "[animals] are the core of what we are as creatures, sharing a biological world and inhabiting our inner lives." Whether she is observing wildlife in the Arizona desert, the American East Coast or Africa, Deming reveals the many lessons that animals can offer the humans who misunderstand or indiscriminately abuse, maim and kill them. Long seen as scavenging pests, crows live in groupsmisnamed "murders"where members serve as loving caretakers to one another. Ancient symbols of fertility, pigs are now routinely taken for granted as sources of meat or as lab specimens for brutal experiments. Intelligent and compassionate, elephants have become the victims of "African militias and warlords [who] use [ivory] poaching to fund death" in their countries. Even when it comes to creation and art, animals as seemingly insignificant as the ant reveal that making art is "a process that meets a biological need" rather than one that somehow elevates humans above other animals. Human ego, greed and bloodlust are at the heart of the animal and planetary destruction that seem all but inevitable. Yet the compassionate work of concerned scientists, groups like the World Wildlife Fund and even zoos leave Deming hopeful. By remaining animal-aware and learning to identify and understand the past and present ties that bind them to all species, humans can make what she calls "the next leap forward in our evolutionary story." Eloquent, sensitive and astute. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.