If you fail to see what’s wrong with our treatment of other animals, you surely will after reading this book. This is a much-needed work, delivered at a time when we can no longer rely on old forms of thinking and acting. It is sharp, critical, and excellently written and demands our attention.
The authors bring all kinds of relevant philosophy to the fore. I did find myself wanting more philosophy for the first 50 pages. Crary and Gruen avoid discussing it directly, relying on empirical data to make their case. But I got what I wanted—and more—from chapter three onwards.
The authors challenge our attempts to draw moral distinctions between species based on their capacities—attempts that pervade the history of animal ethics and are embedded in the justificatory premises of human supremacy. They also show that the way in which we harm and wrong animals (on an unfathomable scale) resembles the way in which we treat humans in capitalist societies: as exploitable and disposable resources. Change will come in many forms, but it will primarily come from challenging political structures that perpetuate objectification and exploitation.
Sometimes big works are cited without being engaged with or without the connection being elaborated. Furthermore, the book is peculiarly structured. There are seven chapters for seven themes: Crisis, Ethics, Suffering, Minds, Dignity, Seeing, and Politics. Each chapter begins with a case study for a particular species of animal. The link is sometimes tenuous. Even so, the authors make it work.
I really enjoyed this!