Lynda Birke,
Animals and
Society Institute (ASI)
March 2014
This paper sketches two intertwined strands of metaphors associated with laboratory rodents. The first focuses on the idea of medical/scientific progress; in this context, the paper looks at laboratory rodents often depicted (in adverertising for laboratory products) as epitomizing medical triumph or serving as helpers or saviors. The second strand concerns the ambiguous status of the laboratory rodent who is both an animal (bites) and not an animal (data).
This paper explores the many meanings attached to the designation, “the
rodent in the laboratory” (rat or mouse).
Generations of selective breeding have created these rodents. They now
differ markedly from their wild progenitors, nonhuman animals associated
with carrying all kinds of diseases.
Through selective breeding, they have moved from the rats of the sewers to
become standardized laboratory tools and (metaphorically) saviors of humans
in the fight against disease.
This paper sketches two intertwined strands of metaphors associated with
laboratory rodents.
The first focuses on the idea of medical/scientific progress; in this
context, the paper looks at laboratory rodents often depicted (in
adverertising for laboratory products) as epitomizing medical triumph or
serving as helpers or saviors.
The second strand concerns the ambiguous status of the laboratory rodent who
is both an animal (bites) and not an animal (data).
The paper argues that, partly because of these ambiguous and multiple
meanings, the rodent in the laboratory is doubly “othered” — first in the
way that animals so often are made other to ourselves and then other in the
relationship of the animal in the laboratory to other animals.
Read entire 17-page
article here - PDF.
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