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To watch apes dressed in human clothing and mimicking human manners--an old standby in films and television shows--can make some human viewers uncomfortable, writes the noted primatologist Frans de Waal. Somehow, by doing so, the apes are crossing some line in the sand, a line that speaks to issues of culture, which humans alone are presumed to have. But culture, in de Waal’s estimation, does not mean using an oyster fork properly or attending smart gallery openings. Instead, it ’means that knowledge and habits are acquired from others--often, but not always, the older generation.’ Culture implies communication and social organization, and in this, he notes, humans by no means have a monopoly. A sushi chef learns by acquiring knowledge and habits from more accomplished masters, but so do chimpanzees learn to wash bananas in jungle streams, and so do birds learn to break open mollusks on the rocks below them. Closely examining anthropocentric theories of culture, de Waal counterposes the notion of anthropodenial, ’the a priori rejection of shared characteristics between humans and animals when in fact they may exist.’ He takes issue with ’selfish gene’ theories of behavior, arguing spiritedly that there are better models for explaining why animals--and humans--do what they do. And, against Aristotle, he argues that humans are not the only political animals, if by politics we mean a social process ’determining who gets what, when, and how.’ What animals and humans clearly share, he concludes, are societies in which stability is an impossibility--an observation that may disappoint utopians, but one that helps explain some of the world’s peculiarities. Perhaps no human alive knows more about the great apes than does Frans de Waal. With this book, he ably shows that he knows a great deal about humans, too. Students of biology, culture, and communication will find much food for thought in his pages. --Gregory McNamee
From Publishers Weekly
Though evidence suggests that animals can teach skills to members of their group, appreciate aesthetics and express empathy, Western scientists are often reluctant to interpret such behavior in cultural terms, claims zoologist and ethologist de Waal (Chimpanzee Politics: Power and Sex Among Apes and Bonobo: The Forgotten Ape). ’Our culture and dominant religion have tied human dignity and self-worth to our separation from nature and distinctness from other animals,’ he writes, arguing that this dualism prevents us from recognizing how similar human and animal behavior can be. De Waal cites fascinating examples of animals acting in ways typically thought the exclusive purview of humans (apes that enjoy creating paintings or engaging in nonreproductive sexual activity; rescue dogs that become depressed when they find only corpses). Inspired by the work of Japanese primatologist Kinji Imanishi, whose cultural tradition emphasizes interconnectedness among living things, de Waal argues for an end to the West’s anthropocentric bias in science. De Waal prefers a ’Darwistotelian’ approach, which would seek ’to understand humanity in the wider context of nature’ and build a concept of human identity ’around how we are animals that have taken certain capacities a significant step farther’ than have other species. Lucid and engaging, though at times loosely focused, de Waal’s ’reflections’ will likely capture the attention not only of zoologists and social scientists but of animal-rights advocates as well. Agent, Elizabeth Ziemska. (Mar. 1)
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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