I've been thinking about the state of the animal defense movement* quite a lot after attending four conferences on organizing this summer. Perhaps for the better, the Animal Rights 2013 conference was not one of them. The conferences I attended were either organized by and for grassroots activist or were nearly silent on the status of animal others. Never have I learned so much and been inspired more. There I was exposed to alternative interpretations of the history and politics of the US and the modern world, and there I realized how white and superficial the analyses and strategies of mainstream animal activists often are.
This post is dedicated to providing resources to those open to re-assessing the history, politics, organization, tactics, theories, and language of the animal defense movement. I intend to write more about the presentations and drama I witnessed at these conferences, but for now I want to share some essays and presentations that have really challenged and inspired me to re-think my assumptions and history of abstract theorizing that is valued in academic settings, especially in philosophy.
Re-Assessing Animal Defense
The History and Politics of the Animal Defense Movement
With the rise of the vegan movements, the politics of animal defense have become increasing personal that many activists have forgotten that vegan-consumption is just one strategy, and not even the most important. On the other hand, large nonprofits have taken to reforms that do not challenge the source of animal oppression: their status as commodities. Yet still, animal defense is often interpreted from the perspective of those who have made careers at nonprofits and universities--what of the history of the grassroots?
- Animal Rights: Moral Crusade or Political Movement (Kim Stallwood 2013)
- The State of the US Animal Rights Movement (Interview w/ Gary Francione 2002)
- Animal Rights History, Welfarism, and 'Star Wars' (Interview w/ Josh Harper 2011)
- History of the Anti-Vivisection Movement (Josh Harper 2013)
The Limits of Vegetarian Outreach
Vegetarian outreach has been a staple of the nonprofit animal defense movement since the 1990's when activists realized that over 95% of animals were killed and exploited by agribusiness. While there is much debate over how to best "sell" vegetarianism, critiques of the sufficiency of veganism as a "baseline" has been less frequent. Is vegan education our most effective tactic? Is "veganism" sufficient for animal liberation?
- The Science of Animal Advocacy (Nick Cooney 2013)
- Science of Science-y -- A Critique of Vegan Outreach Studies (DXE 2013)
- Skinny Bitch and Bulimic Vegetarians (Adam Weitzenfeld 2009)
- Boycott Veganism: Animal rights only begins with your diet (Anonymous 2007)
- A Critique of Consumption-Centered Veganism (Adam Weitzenfeld 2011)
- Abolition, Liberation, Veganism (Ida Hammer 2011)
The Problem with Analogies to Human Oppression
Some animal activists draw logical analogies between the institutional violence against nonhuman animals and oppressed humans. The presumption is that the public will have a logical breakthrough that violence against nonhuman animals is unjust like violence against oppressed humans. Have the articulation and performances of these analogies bore the breakthroughs as activists hoped, or only further alienated them from their cause?
- Animal Whites: PETA and the Politics of Putting things in Perspective (Tim Wise 2005)
- On Analogies as Advocacy Tools: Some Thoughts on Appropriation (BWM 2013)
- Performance Politics: Abstract Animals and Suffering Humans (Dylan Powell 2013)
- Why "Putting Non-Humans First"... Doesn't Work (Corey Wrenn 2013)
Critiques of Non-Profit Campaigns & Conferences
The hegemony of corporate non-profits have "hijacked" the strategy, language, and tactics of animal liberation. Non-profits generate funds and publicity for animals, however, they have also been notoriously conservative on matters of class, race, and gender in their organizations and campaigns. Their collusion with State power, capital, and white supremacy has built a large funding base, but are they building a movement upon the marginalization and oppression of humans?
The hegemony of corporate non-profits have "hijacked" the strategy, language, and tactics of animal liberation. Non-profits generate funds and publicity for animals, however, they have also been notoriously conservative on matters of class, race, and gender in their organizations and campaigns. Their collusion with State power, capital, and white supremacy has built a large funding base, but are they building a movement upon the marginalization and oppression of humans?
- Smoke and Mirrors -- A Critique of the Non-Profit Industrial Complex (Ida Hammer 2009)
- Invasion of the Movement Snatchers (James LaVeck 2006)
- The Need to Address Classism at Conferences, Seminars, and Festivals (Ida Hammer 2008)
- Recalling the Animal Rights Conference 2013 (Anastasia Yarbrough 2013)
- Sexualization (of Women in the Animal Rights Movement) (Vegan Feminist Network 2013)
- Colonialism (in the Animal Rights Movement) (Vegans of Color 2008)
- Veganism and Prison Abolition (Ida Hammer 2009)
The Intersections of Human and White Privilege in the ADM
The animal defense movement has continued to be the whitest social justice movements in the US for decades, despite that people of color are no less compassionate and no less likely to be vegetarian. We've already looked at colonial campaigns, analogies that alienate, under-representation in leadership, and complicity in racist law enforcement. What analytic tools, strategies, and language can whites adopt and support to build coalitions across racialized experiences?
- Working With(in) Whiteness (pattrice Jones 2013)
- The Color of Animal Rights (Dr. Harper, L. Ornelas 2013)
- Intersectionality in Theory and Practice (pattrice Jones 2013)
- What’s Wrong with ‘Rights’ (pattrice jones 2013)
- Beyond Veganism: Food Justice (Lauren Ornelas 2012)
- Decolonizing our Taste Buds and Self-Care (Claudia Serrato 2013)
How to Disrupt Oppression
Once equipped with more sophisticated theory and more supportive of people of color and queer leadership and projects, animal activists are on their way to building a movement that reaches beyond the single-issue identity politics of "animal rights." This is, of course, easier than it sounds. Because nearly all of us in the US have been colonised by white supremacist capitalist heteropatriarchy, it will take some effort on our behalf to challenge its "common sense" built into our brains-and-flesh. How can we resist these old habits?
- Don't be that Dude: Handy Tips for the Male Academic (Acclimatrix 2013)
- The Problem when Sexism Sounds so Darn Friendly (Melanie Tannenbaum 2013)
- Feminist Killjoys (and Other Willful Subjects) (Sara Ahmed 2010)
- How to Tell Someone they Sound Racist (Jay Smooth 2008)
- The Revolution Will Not be Polite (Rachael 2012)
- Getting Called Out: how to Apologize (Chesaleigh 2013)
Over the last ten years as the internet has made it easier to "call-out" animal activists for their complicity with racism and other oppressive systems, some mainstream organizations and many white activists have adopted the language of anti-oppression. Have white activists' identification as allies, acknowledgement of their privileges, and references to "intersectionality" transformed their activism or obscured privilege and power?
- No More "Allies" (Mia Mckenzie 2013)
- Defining and Critiquing 'Intersectionality' (S.E. Smith 2010)
- Tim Wise & the Failure of Privilege Discourse (Robtheidealist 2013)
- The Problem with Privilege (Andrea Smith 2013)
- How Vegan Oppression Cannot Exist (Ida Hammer 2010)
- A Class Struggle Anarchist Analysis of Privilege Theory -- From the Women's Caucus
Are there any essays, talks, and books that have changed your advocacy for animals? Please share in the comments. I may add them to the list!
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