Article ID: CBB613609317

Between Instinct and Intelligence: Harnessing Police Dog Agency in Early Twentieth-Century Paris (2016)

unapi

This article analyzes the introduction of police dogs in early twentieth-century Paris, which formed part of the transnational extension of police powers and their specialization. Within a context of widespread fears of crime and new and contested understandings of animal psychology, police officers, journalists, and canophiles promoted the dogs as inexpensive yet effective agents who could help the police contain the threat posed by criminals. This article responds to a growing number of studies on nonhuman agency by examining how humans in a particular place and time conceptualized and harnessed animal abilities. I argue that while nonhuman agency is an illuminating and important analytical tool, there is a danger that it might become monolithic and static. With these concerns in mind, I show how examining historical actors' conceptualizations of animal abilities takes us closer to the historical stakes and complexities of mobilizing purposeful and capable animals, and provides a better understanding of the constraints within which animals act. Attitudes toward police dogs were entwined with broader discussions of human and animal intelligence. Concerns that dogs' abilities and intelligence were contingent and potentially reversible qualities resembled contemporary biomedical fears that base instincts, desires, and impulses could overwhelm human intelligence and morality, resulting in individual and collective degeneration. To many, it seemed that police dogs' intelligence had not tamed their aggressive instincts, and these worries partly explain the demise of the first wave of police dogs in Paris after World War I.

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Authors & Contributors
Pearson, Chris
Francis, Richard C.
Tahan, Mary R.
Dickinson, Kristin
Kirk, Robert G. W.
Ann-Janine Morey
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Social History of Medicine
Science in Context
History of Psychology
History and Theory
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Publishers
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Walker
W. W. Norton & Co.
University of Toronto Press
Springer
Pennsylvania State University Press
Concepts
Human-animal relationships
Dogs; cats
Animal psychology
Animals
Science and culture
Intelligence
People
Edison, Thomas Alva
Voronoff, Serge Avramovitch
Mead, George Herbert
Chirac, Jacques
Amundsen, Roald
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
Early modern
18th century
17th century
Places
United States
Paris (France)
Great Britain
Germany
France
Guinea
Institutions
Pastoría (Institut Pasteur of French Guinea)
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