Dis/integrating animals: ethical dimensions of the genetic engineering of animals for human consumption

Research at the intersections of feminism, biology and philosophy provides dynamic starting grounds for this discussion of genetic technologies and animals. With a focus on animal bodies, I will examine moral implications of the genetic engineering of "domesticated" animals-primarily pigs...

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Veröffentlicht in:AI & society 2006-01, Vol.20 (1), p.82-102
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description Research at the intersections of feminism, biology and philosophy provides dynamic starting grounds for this discussion of genetic technologies and animals. With a focus on animal bodies, I will examine moral implications of the genetic engineering of "domesticated" animals-primarily pigs and chickens-for the purposes of human consumption. Concepts of natural and artificial, contamination and purity, integrity and fragmentation and mind and body will feature in the discussion. In this respect, Margaret Atwood's novel, Oryx and Crake, serves as a cogent medium for exploring these highly contentious practices and ideas as it provides hypothetical narratives of possibility. Moreover, it is used to highlight contemporary hegemonic assumptions and values in ways that make them visible. Particular attention is paid to issues of growing human organs in pigs for xenotransplantation (resulting, for Atwood, in "pigoons") and the ultimate end of the intensive factory farming of chickens through the genetic engineering of 'mindless' chicken tumours (or, as Atwood calls them, "ChickieNobs"). Integral to these philosophical considerations is the provocative question of the genetic modification of animal bodies as a means to end the suffering of domestic food animals. The ultimate implications of this question include an ongoing sensory and moral deprivation of human experience, potentially resulting in a future mechanomophosis, the extreme manifestation of an existing mechanomorphism.
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subjects Animals
Bioethics
Chickens
Consumption
Ethics
Genetic engineering
Human
Intensive farming
Livestock industry
Novels
Philosophy
Transgenic animals
Xenotransplantation
title Dis/integrating animals: ethical dimensions of the genetic engineering of animals for human consumption
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