A highlight of this year's MLA Convention in Chicago was being included in a session on Susan Crane's new book Animal Encounters: Contacts and Concepts in Medieval Britain. The panel was jointly sponsored by two divisions, "Medieval French" and "Middle English excluding Chaucer." Sarah Kay presided, and the panelists also included Peggy McCracken and Robert Mills. Susan Crane responded to our papers and a lively conversation followed, with lively audience participation.
Here's my piece. Let me know what you think.
The allegorization of animals is deeply
medieval. Bestiaries, romances and even scientific works transform them into human
foibles, Christian virtues, and pedagogical injunctions. Susan Crane’s Animal Encounters refuses to discern in the
beasts of medieval texts only anthropomorphism, only tropes for human stories. In
the bestiary account of the stag (cervus),
we are offered a potent sign for the good Christian. But Crane also
demonstrates how we likewise behold the trace of a living deer that makes its
way through dense woods, instructs its children, and retreats into its own wondrous
world. She describes such moments of encounter and enmeshment as “embodied
scenes of imaginative production" (1). Aside from brief glimpses of modern
analogues and the anchoring of her argument in critical animal studies, her project
is not explicitly tied to present-day concerns -- yet within the human-animal
intimacies she investigates inhere new ways of forging relations between ecologies
past and present. I taught Susan’s book alongside Mick Smith’s Against Ecological Sovereignty this fall
in a graduate seminar on “Contact Ecologies,” and that juxtaposition emphasized
for me how much the project of Animal
Encounters, even if directed towards the medieval past, intimates new modes
of environmental enmeshment and a densely cross-temporal ethics of encounter.
The
texts and topics examined in this capacious book include: the ravens, cats and
wolves of early saints’ lives and monastic lyric as experiments in
environmental cohabitation; Marie de France's charismatic werewolf Bisclavret
as indeterminate creature, a challenging compound of wonder and adventure,
extending an invitation to follow the animal to new realms; the taxonomic ardor
of the bestiary tradition as a method of making knowable the spiritual unity of
creation that also reveals continuities among its collected creatures,
discovering in foxes, apes, and dogs qualities which are supposed to
distinguish humans but instead render them humanely adjacent; hunting manuals
for an aristocratic audience that simultaneously buttress the privilege of a
select group of humans and sonically intermix them with the hounds they
accompany through the woods; kindness capable of crossing the species barrier
in Chaucer's Squires Tale, enabling a
princess and a bird to construct, however contingently, a mode of compassionate
co-dwelling; and the mutuality of relation between knight and horse in
chivalric romance. Animal Encounters
is learned, lucid, and cogent, yet another contribution to rethinking the
Middle Ages from a scholar renowned for her ability to analyze polyglot and
diverse materials in ways that profoundly change their critical estimation. This
book opens up possibilities, and deserves enthusiastic celebration – prolonged,
and with lots of champagne.
Among
the volume’s strengths is its insistence that Christianity is not monolithic,
that the medieval theological record is diverse (too many scholars collapse
medieval theology into a harmonized version of the Patrologia Latina). The materials examined here are in Latin, Old
Irish, Middle English and medieval French, emphasizing the complicated multilingualism
of the British archipelago (a polyglot world that extends in the book through
hunting cries even to animal companions). What would the “Medieval Britain” of
the book’s subtitle become, though, if the implicitly Christian ambit of its “Medieval”
were widened? How might cohabitation change by following the pigs, owls, and
hyenas that trace a liminal region between the book’s Christian authors and
Jews, their English urban neighbors from just after the Norman Conquest until the
Expulsion of 1290? As Karl Steel has shown, thinking the Jew and thinking the
animal often went hand in hand. What would the subtitle’s “Britain” become if “Celtic”
peoples were granted coevalness with the book’s late as well as early English
materials? Could the Welsh and the Irish who appear in the first chapter as
monks and saints also appear as late medieval writers? The tales collected as
the Mabinogion are full of animals, sparse
in monks, and with their Anglo-Norman traces certainly part of the contact zone
that was medieval Britain. The twelfth-century discourse of race was also a
discourse of species. We’re not talking abstract figuration here, but “embodied
scenes of imaginative production.” To push this farther: what happens to
taxonomy when humans and animals mate, engendering viable offspring? Gerald of Wales
is provocative on this topic, especially as he describes the people of Ireland
cross-breeding with their own cattle. He also asks questions like: what happens
when a monkey mates with a dog? And we could add: what, outside of Augustine’s
simplification of the issue, is the function of the species-blurring monster?
Not all humans were
equally human, nor will what constitutes an animal always be clear. Some animals
hovered between the organic and the inorganic, such as coral and oysters (the
bestiaries describe oysters as “living rocks”). Many bestiaries are bound with
lapidaries, and it is not difficult to see why: the rocks of the lapidary
tradition, romance, and travel narrative are as lively and assertive as anything
contained in zoological compendia. The travel narrative published under the
name of John Mandeville describes diamonds that come in two forms, male and
female. Erotic inclination brings the gems into union. Diamonds undertake slow
lithic coitus that within its own geologic time creates ever more glistening
and libidinous rocks, little baby diamonds:
They grow together
male and female and they feed on the dew from Heaven, and they conceive and
beget and make their little children beside them that multiply and grow every
year. I have many times demonstrated that if they are kept with a little of the
rock, and not separated from their root, and wet often with May dew, they grow
visibly every year, and small ones become quite big.[i]
These gems that grow and multiply, eat and thrive, are also susceptible to
human domestication, true pet rocks. The Mandeville narrative quietly suggests that
these gems are creaturely, that they belong with organisms that prowl the
world, reproduce, ingest, desire.
Many bestiaries
contain an entry for lapides igniferi
[fire-bearing stones], defined as “igneous rocks of the masculine and feminine
gender.” Kept at a distance the two forms remain inert. Should the male rock approach
the female, however, “fire breaks forth and consumes all.” These combustive stones
appear in the good company of the phoenix, elephants, panthers, beavers,
dragons. In the Aberdeen Bestiary (one of the second-family bestiaries, the
manuscript group examined by Susan Crane), the firestones are fully humanizedas a nude man and woman, aflame in a garden perhaps meant to recall Eden (93v);
since humans are also made from earth and water, such representations make good
biblical sense.[ii]
Yet this bestiary balances its lithic representations. Upon flipping the page the reader is met by a depiction of a lone rock atop a still, green hill (f
94r). This stone is adamas, the
diamond, most impenetrable of materials, its solitariness a rebuke to the
blazing gregariousness of its siblings. On a placid summit, removed from story
and from time, the Aberdeen adamas
dwells indifferent to human relation and fiery futurity.[iii]
Depictions of fire
rocks are almost never content to leave stone to seclusion, to add nothing of
human story. Yet a surprisingly nonanthropomorphic, nonnarrative representation
appears in the bestiary of Harley 3244 (at f. 60). Igneous red mixed with
blazing orange, these five stones shine like embers on a grassy mountain slope.
They are uniformly partitioned from each other, serene in their glow.[iv]
The Harley fire rocks glimmer with vitality, but they have not yet ignited into
cataclysmic story, unperturbed in their vibrant materiality. They hold
themselves off from encounter (even while participating in visual contact). Other
depictions of fire rocks are jarringly hybrid. Another bestiary [Gonville and
Caius College] illustrates firestones as two dark rocks, petal-like extensions
framing the human faces at their centers, uneasily eying each other. They seem
keenly to apprehend that something is
about to arrive, but do not know enough to regard that fatal advent with
anything but puzzlement.
Rock is
anthropomorphized not to become more knowable, not to be assimilated into the human
or the creaturely, but to remove stone from that constrictive familiarity which
prevents full realization of its challenge, even queerness. What might such animated
objects have to say to the kinds of encounter and contact Susan Crane explores
in their medieval diversity? What happens to “creaturely relationship constituted
in compassion” (Animal Encounters
170) when the creature involved is not “the living animal” (171), but a lively thing,
a stone? Might the “problem of animality” (4) be related more widely to
problems of environmentality, including “how bodies, minds, and affects
interpenetrate” not only “within and across species,” (9) but within and across
ecomaterialities? What happens when animal encounter becomes environmental
encounter, and grows to include the vastness of the material world with all its
forces, organic and inorganic?
Reading
Susan Crane’s rich book provoked many such questions, and deeply inspired my own
writing and research. What better gift can a volume bestow than the catalysis
of new work, new thought? Animal
Encounters is Susan Crane at her best, and that is really saying something.
[i]
I quote from the lively translation of Ian McLeod Higgins, 99. For the French
see Jean de Mandeville, Les Livre des
Merveilles du Monde, ed. Christiane Deluz 306. The Latin commandment from
Genesis will be quoted on the island of Lamory, 332.
[ii]
Kellie Robertson acutely observes “These anthropomorphizing accounts of
fire-producing stones suggest a natural world motivated by recognizably human
desires and behaviors. The habit of moralizing rocks in this way seems to
reduce the inanimate object to a screen on which the human is projected in
grainy but recognizable form” (‘Exemplary Rocks” 93). Robertson argues against
such reductive reading (rocks are more than humans in “petric drag”) by
pointing out that “this allegorized world is one of mutual, rather than
unidirectional, influence” (94): both rocks and humans are changed by their
proximity and relations.
[iii]
Adamas introduces a lapidary bound
with the bestiary. Vellum quality changes at this point and the lapidary
section is not well illustrated. The adamas
portrait may be unfinished.
[iv]
Debra Hassig describes the peaceful illustration as almost a landscape portrait:
Medieval Bestiaries 117.
Dorothy Kim pointed out on Facebook that the panel and the discussion that followed were tweeted, and can be found via #medievaltwitter.
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