This
article is a foundation essay. These are longer than usual and take a wider
look at a key issue affecting society.
In the history of European cultures,
the comparison of humans to apes and monkeys was disparaging from its very
beginning.
When Plato – by quoting Heraclitus –
declared apes ugly in relation to humans and men apish in relation to gods,
this was cold comfort for the apes. It transcendentally disconnected them from
their human co-primates. The Fathers of the Church went one step further: Saint
Gregory of Nazianzus and Saint Isidore of Seville compared pagans to monkeys.
In the Middle Ages, Christian
discourse recognised simians as devilish figures and representatives of lustful
and sinful behaviour. As women were subject to an analogous defamation, things
proceeded as one would expect. In the 11th century, Cardinal Peter Damian gave
an account of a monkey that was the lover of a countess from Liguria. The
jealous simian killed her husband and fathered her child
Hotbed
of monsters
Several centuries later in 1633, John
Donne in his Metempsychosis even let one of Adam’s
daughters be seduced by an ape in a sexual affair. She eagerly reciprocated and
became helplessly hooked.
From then on, the sexist
manifestation of simianisation was intimately intertwined with its racist
dimension. Already Jean Bodin, doyen of the theory of sovereignty, had ascribed
the sexual intercourse of animals and humans to Africa south of the Sahara. He
characterised the region as a hotbed of monsters, arising from the sexual union
of humans and animals.
The history of a narrative by Antonio
de Torquemada shows how in this process Africans became demonised and the
demons racialised. In the story’s first version (1570), a Portuguese woman was
exiled to Africa where she was raped by an ape and had his babies.
A good century onwards the story had
entered the realm of Europe’s great philosophical thought when John Locke in
his 1689 essay Concerning Human Understanding, declared that
“women have conceived by drills”. His intellectual contemporaries knew well
that the stage for this transgressing love-and-rape-story was Africa because,
according to the wisdom of the time, drills lived in Guinea.
In the following centuries,
simianisation would enter into different sciences and humanities. Anthropology,
archaeology, biology, ethnology, geology, medicine, philosophy, and, not least,
theology were some of the fields.
To be continued in part 2
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