Compassion, Hunger and Animal Suffering: Scenes from Kerala, South India.
J Appl Anim Welf Sci
; 25(2): 139-152, 2022.
Article
in English
| MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2134269
ABSTRACT
Animal narratives have not been a major part of the coronavirus pandemic other than to frame animals as "epidemic villains" whose relations with humans are either zoonotic or pathological. In this context, this article considers stories of compassion from Kerala, where activists and ordinary people started feeding stray dogs and other street animals during the state instituted lockdowns. State sanction and media coverage of feeding these hungry animals allowed them to be instated as part of a multispecies community in the pandemic, allowing them for the first time, legitimized access to food and water. Compassion was prescribed and validated on the basis of perceiving suffering synergistically or as mutually experienced during the pandemic. However, a linear history of compassion cannot be constructed as Kerala has an antagonistic relationship with street dogs framing them as violent free-ranging dogs that carry diseases and attack people. This article draws on insights gleaned from multispecies ethnography to explore the hidden everyday lives of the animals during the pandemic. It raises questions about how people come to occupy relations of care in societies where animal suffering is not acknowledged and explores the possibilities opened by the way compassion was constructed as a practical and moral value during the pandemic.
Keywords
Full text:
Available
Collection:
International databases
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Hunger
/
Empathy
Type of study:
Prognostic study
/
Qualitative research
Limits:
Animals
/
Humans
Country/Region as subject:
Asia
Language:
English
Journal:
J Appl Anim Welf Sci
Journal subject:
Veterinary Medicine
Year:
2022
Document Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
10888705.2022.2042298
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