Article ID: CBB001202103

From Secret Agents to Interagency (2013)

unapi

Despret, Vinciane (Author)


History and Theory
Volume: 52, no. 4
Issue: 4
Pages: 29-44


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Special Issue, “Does History Need Animals?”
Language: English

Some scientists who study animals have emphasized the need to focus on the point of view of the animals they are studying. This methodological shift has led to animals being credited with much more agency than is warranted. However, as critics suggest, on the one hand, the perspective of another being rests mostly upon sympathetic projection, and may be difficult to apply to unfamiliar beings, such as bees or even flowers. On the other hand, the very notion of agency still conveys its classic understanding as intentional, rational, and premeditated, and is still embedded in humanist and Christian conceptions of human exceptionalism. This paper seeks, in the first part, to investigate the practical link between these two notions and the problems they raise. In the second part, following the work of two historians of science who have revisited Darwin's studies of orchids and their pollinators, it will observe a shift in the meaning of the concept of agency. Indeed, creatures may appear as secret agents as long as we adopt a conventional definition of agency based on subjective experience and autonomous intention. However, when reframed in the terms of agencement --- an assemblage that produces agentivity --- agency seems to be much more extensively shared in the living world. We will then explore some of the concrete situations in which these agencements are manifested, and through which creatures of different species become, one for another and one with another, companion-agents.

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Description Looks at the trend over time to give more agency to animals.


Included in

Article Shaw, David Gary (2013) A Way with Animals. History and Theory (pp. 1-12). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001202103/

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Authors & Contributors
Mason, Jennifer
Overhoff, Jürgen
Machado, Cristina de Amorim
Jaroš, Filip
Shibani Bose
Brentari, Carlo
Concepts
Human-animal relationships
Nature and its relationship to culture; human-nature relationships
Animals
Science and culture
Evolution
Science and literature
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
21st century
18th century
Ancient
Places
United States
Great Britain
Nile River
Singapore
Netherlands
Russia
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