Lauren Choplin,
Nonhuman
Rights Project
April 2017
Thalia Field’s new book, Experimental Animals, a “reality fiction” that explores the fraught relationship between notorious 19th-century French vivisector Claude Bernard and his wife Fanny, who came to oppose his research. A vivifying collage of Fanny’s voice, Claude’s journal entries, letters by prominent anti-vivisectionists, found photos, and more, the book provides a compelling framework for thinking about the long history of the fight for nonhuman rights and the role that individual activists have played, and continue to play, in it.
As you may know, when I started managing the Nonhuman Rights Project’s social media pages in the summer of 2013, I was a grad student in literature at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. Little did I know, volunteering with the NhRP would be so interesting to me—this in the six months or so before we first filed suit—that I’d ultimately decide to forgo the career path of the literary academic and join the NhRP full time.
That said, I’m no less inspired by the power of literature to promote and
effect social change, which is why I was thrilled when the editors at Solid
Objects, a publisher of fiction, poetry, drama, and nonfiction based in New
York City, wrote to let us know they wanted to host a benefit for the NhRP
and the Natural Resources Defense Council featuring readings by Thalia
Field, Julie Carr, Karen Joy Fowler, Miranda Mellis, Laura Mullen, and Jim
Shepard—writers who are deeply engaged with the most pressing social and
political issues of our time. This unique bringing together of artists and
activists (and artist-activists) will take place next Wednesday, Jan. 18, at
The Kitchen in New York City. Please join us if you can!
We at the NhRP are looking forward to it—especially after we read Thalia
Field’s new book, Experimental Animals, a “reality fiction” that
explores the fraught relationship between notorious 19th-century French
vivisector Claude Bernard and his wife Fanny, who came to oppose his
research. A vivifying collage of Fanny’s voice, Claude’s journal entries,
letters by prominent anti-vivisectionists, found photos, and more, the book
provides a compelling framework for thinking about the long history of the
fight for nonhuman rights and the role that individual activists have
played, and continue to play, in it. I had the great pleasure of
interviewing Thalia via email.
Our conversation
Lauren Choplin: You’ve written about nonhuman animals
before. What compelled you to write this book at this time and in this form?
Thalia Field: Experimental Animals was necessary for me to
research and write because I wanted to explore how we’ve ended up so
disastrously disconnected from the suffering we are imposing on the living
world. I discovered that the crisis of how humans have separated from the
rest of the animals, instrumentalizing them (and thereby our own values),
has clear-cut historic roots. Our animal crisis has been in the making for a
long time. Through legislative, philosophical, and scientific changes, we
have lost touch with how to value and respect our world and all who live in
it, except through extremely utilitarian terms. Our excessive love of pets
continues to cover up the industrialized cruelty to the same animals—and
many others—whether through scientific, agricultural, or ecological
devastation. My hope is that through new forms of storytelling, through
exploring the problem through a number of approaches, writers and artists
can invest narratives that are more interdependent, less human-centric.
Claude and Fanny Bernard represent, in their dysfunctional marriage and
separation, the controversies surrounding vivisection and animal abuse in
19th-century Paris. Their drama became the wider societal drama of
scientists, artists, philosophers, and activists—waged over living animals
in pain. That the animal laboratory (as well as other sites of animal
cruelty) is so natural to us now, and the pain so hidden, is something I
wanted the reader to see through the historical lens of a time when it
wasn’t.
LC: The writing, I want to say, is stunning: that’s the
word that kept recurring to me as I read. And when I asked myself, “why that
word?” I thought of the pared-down, exacting beauty of your prose in
general, and Fanny’s voice in particular, but also how often it made me feel
dazed—as if I had just been delivered a blow without having seen it coming,
rendered immobile the same way one of Bernard’s countless animal subjects
would have been (“Sliding along the spine of an uncomprehending dog, Claude
holds the writhing animal in place, announcing, ‘Thus we open our book!’”).
Experimental Animals seems to have great faith in the rhetorical power of
straightforward, visceral description of animal experimentation and animal
suffering. How did you want description to function in the book? To what
extent would you say you made a conscious effort to not “pull at the
reader’s heartstrings,” so to speak (especially considering this tactic is
so prevalent in animal advocacy)?
TF: Because the book is looking at “experimentalism” in
both the scientific world, and then in the artistic world that emulated it,
I try to explore different aesthetic choices toward suffering and
description. For example, I mention the preface to Wilkie Collin’s Heart and
Science, in which he says he will not disturb the reader with graphic
descriptions of the laboratory. On the other hand, you have Zola, who
exposed the “naked” truth of social injustice, but never stood up against
vivisection, and used animals mostly metaphorically or chimerically. The
other writers I include are the activists such as Anna Kingsford and Francis
Cobbe, who define their “realism” as the need to quote the physiologists and
awaken their audiences to the unvarnished texts and images. I quote from the
preface to A Key to Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which used first-person and other
research, and was more popular than the novel, at least in France. These
precedents are in the book to alert the reader to why I include original and
often disturbing material. If I didn’t include it, I wouldn’t be able to
represent the animals in their pain, in their situation, nor explain the
feeling of desperation that many of the activists felt as they fought what
they saw as a life-or-death battle. They spent their every day saving these
animals, and if we didn’t understand, if we DON’T understand, that they
viewed pain even for one creature as a worthy life cut short, cut off,
destroyed, we don’t understand their passion and sacrifice.
This was my motivation for writing the more graphic parts of the book, as
well as to show the scientists at work—in their own rituals of dedication
and sacrifice—in its full graphic and violent form. Their aesthetic, at
least for the public, became to change the language and hide the violence:
three dogs would be turned into “three vagus nerves”—therewith hiding the
animal. I wanted to expose that practice as a choice, as something that
distances and protects. I mention Goya as well—his engravings that basically
said of war: here is the atrocity, it needs to be witnessed. And those were
silent images. During the time my book covers, whole neighborhoods could
HEAR the animals, day in and out. I wanted to bring that into clarity for
the reader. We are protected, too much, from the sounds and the smells and
the horrors being done in our name.
LC: Under cover of night, Fanny and her daughters search
for and save from Claude and his assistants the stray animals Claude brings
back to his lab. As their and others’ resistance to Claude’s experiments
begins to materializes, I found myself deeply moved. I’m still working on
how exactly to account for this feeling, which stayed with me for the rest
of the book, but I was struck by how ghostly and ephemeral the
anti-vivisectionists’ work seemed even while they were in the middle of it.
And then, of course, as we know—and as the book takes care to remind us, I
think—the anti-vivisectionist cause will outlast any individual activist’s
life, just as the arguments advanced by people who experiment on animals
have persisted into the 21st century. I’m sure these dimensions of the book
will be compelling to animal advocates who understand the long-term nature
of the fight and labor daily under a mixture of despair and hope. To what
extent do you view Experimental Animals as a hopeful book?
TF: In order to get a grip on today’s controversies, I felt
compelled to write about a time when the situation (vivisection in
particular, animal “rights” in general) was just being worked out. In this
historical period, I was amazed to discover that the outcome was not
predetermined, and the struggle to “legitimize” the laboratories—to get
vivisection left out of the anti-cruelty legislation, to achieve
state-sponsorship and protection for scientists—was all a very step by step
process, with the activists fighting and making it hard the whole way. This
public power is important to remember today—and I think it had a lot to do
with the fact that the public was exposed to the extent of the cruelty, in
other words, it wasn’t as hidden and euphemized as now.
That’s the hopeful part for me—that the harder we work to uncover the truth
of it, the more the public’s sense of wisdom will be aroused, and perhaps
the conversation will grow more potent until vivisection can find its end. I
also wanted to uncover the stories of the amazing activists who have come
before, because just as one studies other heroes, it is important to not
feel that a challenging effort is isolated. The continuity is there,
especially for the lawyers and the legislators and activists who are taking
the public energy, helping direct it, to focus on profound questions of what
is a life worth and what is its measure. The other point I think the book is
hopeful about is that activism has always taken many forms—from the women
who simply stole or fed the strays, to the writers and platform
speakers—everyone can do a part. I can’t go to law school (though I’ve
thought about it) but I can write, and I can give my money to those who can
do the legal work.
LC: Thank you so much for your support for the NhRP and
arranging with Max and Lisa for the Jan. 18th event to serve in part as a
benefit for our organization. We deeply appreciate it! Can I ask, how and
why did you become a nonhuman rights supporter? What commonalities do you
see between what you do and what we do—between the domain of literature and
the domain of law, as far as animal advocacy is concerned?
TF: I think literature suffers from the same problems our
society suffers from—a narrow and human-centered view. This isn’t to say
there aren’t many cruel and unjust human problems that need exposure, only
that our stories are usually so limited to only people, that we ignore how
degradation and injustice spreads to all. I’ve always tried to make work
that places the humans in a much larger frame, whether time scale, size, or
extension of interdependent web of lives. I think literature, like our laws
and values, need to reflect a more humble view of the human in the world,
and remake our notion of the “heroic” and the “protagonist” so that we
reframe the stories we tell with new language, new definitions of character,
self, event. We are much more intertwined than we even realize, and yet our
mainstream movies and fictions, our self-understanding, rarely moves beyond
the human hall of mirrors. I take this as a personal aesthetic challenge,
but I recognize kindred thinking in the animal rights community—and in those
philosophers and thinkers who are striving to redirect and refocus the
conversation we have with ourselves about our place in the world, and our
responsibilities. I couldn’t be more dedicated to doing whatever I can in my
tiny way to improving the lives of animals right now at this very moment.
The NhRP is at the forefront of change. You are working to protect the truly
voiceless and most vulnerable, just as many writers hope to tell those
stories, too. Now is the time for us to demand new forms of art, new views,
new approaches. Animals need advocates of every sort. My greatest admiration
extends to those who take the animals’ cases to the courts. In the human
world, the courts are powerful arbiters, necessary, flawed, and yet a
crucial, must-win battleground. Thanks to you for all you do.
LC: Thank you, Thalia!
To learn more about and/or purchase Thalia’s book, visit the Solid Objects website.
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