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Academic & Professional Books  Organismal to Molecular Biology  Ethology

How Animals Grieve

By: Barbara J King(Author)
193 pages, 7 b/w photos
NHBS
How Animals Grieve is a thought-provoking book that surveys a large body of anecdotal observations to compellingly argue that animals can, and do, grieve.
How Animals Grieve
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  • How Animals Grieve ISBN: 9780226155203 Paperback Apr 2014 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £11.50
    #212276
  • How Animals Grieve ISBN: 9780226436944 Hardback May 2013 Out of Print #204085
Selected version: £11.50
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles Recommended titles

About this book

From the time of our earliest childhood encounters with animals, we casually ascribe familiar emotions to them. But scientists have long cautioned against such anthropomorphizing, arguing that it limits our ability to truly comprehend the lives of other creatures. Recently, however, things have begun to shift in the other direction, and anthropologist Barbara J. King is at the forefront of that movement, arguing strenuously that we can – and should – attend to animal emotions. With How Animals Grieve, she draws our attention to the specific case of grief, and relates story after story – from fieldsites, farms, homes, and more – of animals mourning lost companions, mates, or friends.

King tells of elephants surrounding their matriarch as she weakens and dies, and, in the following days, attending to her corpse as if holding a vigil. A housecat loses her sister, from whom she's never before been parted, and spends weeks pacing the apartment, wailing plaintively. A baboon loses her daughter to a predator and sinks into grief. In each case, King uses her anthropological training to interpret and try to explain what we see – to help us understand this animal grief properly, as something neither the same as nor wholly different from the human experience of loss. The resulting book How Animals Grieve is both daring and down to earth, strikingly ambitious even as it's careful to acknowledge the limits of our understanding.

Through the moving stories she chronicles and analyzes so beautifully, King brings us closer to the animals with whom we share a planet and helps us see our own experiences, attachments, and emotions as part of a larger web of life, death, love, and loss.

Contents

Prologue: On Grief and Love

1 Keening for Carson the Cat
2 A Dog’s Best Friend
3 Mourning on the Farm
4 Why Bunnies Get Depressed
5 Elephant Bones
6 Do Monkeys Mourn?
7 Chimpanzees, Cruel to Be Kind
8 Bird Love
9 Sea of Emotion: Dolphins, Whales, and Turtles
10 No Boundaries: Cross-Species Grief
11 Animal Suicide?
12 Ape Grief
13 On Bison Death in Yellowstone and Obituaries of Animals
14 Writing Grief
15 The Prehistory of Grief

Afterword
Acknowledgments
Readings and Resources

Customer Reviews (1)

  • A thought-provoking survey of a large body of anecdotal observations
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 12 Oct 2024 Written for Paperback


    Death, and its attendant grief, is on that infamous shortlist of two things that are sure in life. But are humans alone in understanding death? To prepare for reviewing Susana Monsó's new book Playing Possum, I reach back in time to 2013 to a highly relevant book that has been sitting on my shelf unread for too long. In How Animals Grieve, anthropologist Barbara J. King mines a compelling vein of anecdotes that strongly suggest this emotion is not uniquely human.

    This is largely a book of stories and observations made by scientists, zookeepers, pet owners, and others who share their lives with animals. King introduces you to elephants who will seek out the bones of fallen comrades to caress and explore them with their nimble trunks. There are heartbreaking tales of dolphins keeping afloat dead calves and monkeys carrying around dead infants, to the point of corpses starting to rot and mummify. Pet owners who have had multiple cats, dogs, or rabbits widely report how survivors are affected by the loss of a companion that they have spent years with. Primatologists have recorded strong responses in chimpanzees and gorillas to the death of fellow apes. There are touching stories here of cross-species friendships on farms and sanctuaries followed by signs of grief when one of the two partners dies. How Animals Grieve flows over with stories that will tug at your heartstrings.

    King, while moved by these stories, keeps her composure and examines the matter with the eyes of a scientist. There are noticeable commonalities when a companion dies: distress, loss of appetite and weight, a lacklustre or dejected attitude with a loss of interest in one's environment, acting out, displays of aggression, etc. Animals of many stripes show such behaviours. An initial and, by her admission, not completely perfect definition of animal grief hinges on two ingredients. First is love as evidenced by a strong drive to be close to each other. Second is the suffering that follows when animals can no longer be together. "When we find animal grief, we are likely to find animal love, and vice versa. It's as if the two share emotional borders" (p. 10).

    Particularly interesting is the neurobiological work on animal grief that King discusses here. The authors of a 2011 study looked at the biology of depression and observed that stress has a neurophysiological impact, leading to brain damage. The resultant inflammatory response to repair it leads to psychological pain. Is this what we experience as grief? King quotes one of the authors who summarises their findings thus: "Grief is an evolved behavioral program, akin to sickness behavior, that promotes convalescence during a significant neural rewriting job" (p. 50). It responds to earlier work by John Archer who in The Nature of Grief instead argued that grief might be evolutionarily maladaptive but also an unavoidable corollary of a more useful separation response that drives individuals to reunite when separated.

    King admits that not all examples she discusses here are airtight. When we move away from primates and other social mammals, gauging what is going on becomes harder. Do intelligent birds such as corvids grieve? Experts think they do, but probably not for very long. And what about sea turtles? Hawai'ian locals who in 2008 erected a memorial for a slaughtered turtle observed a male visiting it and sticking around for hours. King admits it is hard to know what was going on here, despite the spin immediately put on it by media reports. Some cases may seem far-fetched but I am reminded of Safina's pithy conclusion in Beyond Words about how humans and other animals are all shaped by the same evolutionary forces: "beneath the skin, kin" (p. 324 therein). We are all built on the same meat-and-bones platform, running on the same bio-logic, if you will. This is an area ripe for further study and drives home a point King makes midway through the book: "We won't have a hope of finding [...] grief until we look for it" (p. 105).

    I want to call out three take-home messages. First, King early on highlights that, though death and grief often co-occur, they do not have to. Grief does not require "a cognitive mastering of the concept of death" (p. 14) and not grieving is not equal to not understanding death. This distinction will be particularly relevant when we next turn to Monsó's book Playing Possum. However, King muddies the water somewhat: despite this caveat, she almost exclusively discusses grief in the context of death, with other contexts only given incidental mention and not explicitly examined. Is, as Monsó highlights, such data simply not available because of the anthropocentric biases in what researchers choose to study? If so, King does not comment on it, nor call for researchers to examine grief in other contexts.

    Second, and tying in with this, King highlights both intra- and interspecific variation in grief. Intraspecific variation means that not all individuals of a species will express grief, though that for King does not negate the phenomenon at large. Furthermore, especially in primates, we have clear examples of individuals showing different responses to death. Interspecific variation means that there is no universal way of grieving across species: "Goat grief [...] is not chicken grief [...] is not chimpanzee grief or elephant grief or human grief" (p. 7). As an anthropologist, she thinks humans are exceptional in being able to anticipate future grief when someone falls ill, sometimes months or years ahead of time. However, acknowledging such differences "need not amount to a manifesto of human superiority" (p. 147). Asking whether our grief is deeper than that of other animals misses the point for her.

    Third, the study of animal grief has value for anthropology. We have scattered evidence of purposeful burials far back into prehistory, but were these accompanied by grief and mourning? Archaeology cannot answer this question, but the body of observations discussed here can help, suggesting that grief has deep evolutionary roots. King is quick to qualify this: "It is only emotional *capacity* that this comparative context illuminates, though, and we would do well to keep in mind that the capacity to experience an emotion doesn't always result in the *expression* of that emotion" (p. 159).

    How Animals Grieve is a compelling and thought-provoking book. To my mind, King leaves little doubt that we are not alone in experiencing grief, even if the details differ between species. The consequences of what that means for how we treat animals are only all too briefly explored here, beyond her acknowledgement that we are often the cause of animal grief. If books by Carl Safina, Frans de Waal, or Marc Bekoff resonate with you, this book will too.
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Biography

Barbara J. King is professor of anthropology at the College of William and Mary. She is the author or editor of many books, including Being with Animals. She blogs regularly for National Public Radio and reviews for the Times Literary Supplement.

By: Barbara J King(Author)
193 pages, 7 b/w photos
NHBS
How Animals Grieve is a thought-provoking book that surveys a large body of anecdotal observations to compellingly argue that animals can, and do, grieve.
Media reviews

"A beautifully written book that will appeal to animal lovers."
– Booklist

“Barbara J. King has pulled together anecdotal and scientific data on grief and love in animals in her excellent book How Animals Grieve. With her engaging story telling she opens up our eyes to the possible inner lives of some surprising species. We expect big-brained chimpanzees and elephants to express their feelings, but her tales of rabbits, goats, birds, turtles and others force us to look again at the emotional content of animal lives.”
– Cynthia Moss, author of Elephant Memories: Thirteen Years in the Life of an Elephant Family

"Poignant, thoughtful, and sometimes heartbreaking. Barbara J. King once again elevates the discussion of animal emotion. She tackles a tricky subject with a scientist's care and an animal lover's grace."
– Jennifer Holland, author of Unlikely Friendships: 47 Remarkable Stories from the Animal Kingdom

"I must admit that I was skeptical that an entire book could be written on the subject of animal grief, because the scientific literature in this area is so painfully thin. But Barbara King has succeeded beautifully. She has collected an incredible database of stories about various kinds of animals, and taken together they offer more than enough substance to sustain this book. It is as if she has created a mosaic for her reader. She has collected bits and pieces – individual stories about one animal or another – which by themselves might be little but trifles. But King pastes them together with masterful skill, and the result is a compelling picture of animal grief. We get the feeling that there are still a lot of blank spaces on the canvas, as our scientific understanding is far from complete, but it is only a matter of time before these spaces will begin to fill in. How Animals Grieve is a fascinating book which will interest and inform animal lovers and scientists alike."
– Jessica Pierce, author of The Last Walk

"In this deeply moving and beautifully composed treatise that is sure to anger some, but inspire many, Barbara King methodically presents her powerful evidence that many animals possess thoughts, feelings and emotions, including the profound sense of loss following the death of a family member or close companion. Consider, for example, the female dolphin who carries her dead calf for several days, loath to part with her beloved child. What else is she doing but grieving? It might be a controversial, minority viewpoint that some animals mourn the death of others, but King's profound and well-documented work has left me firmly in her camp."
– David Kirby, author of Death at Seaworld

"Humans and other animals experience love and fear, and form deep emotional bonds with cherished companions. We mourn when a close friend dies, and so do other animals, as Barbara King's poignant book illustrates in compelling detail. How Animals Grieve helps us to connect and to better understand the complex social lives of other animals and of ourselves."
– Gene Baur, president and cofounder of Farm Sanctuary

"Let me begin by saying I recommend this book to anyone who doubts that animals grieve. The evidence presented is overwhelming."
– EcoLit

"How Animals Grieve is not the definitive work on animal grief, but rather a stepping-stone to further investigation, observation and understanding. King hopes others will continue to look with fresh eyes, expand our knowledge and better understand all animals."
– Shelf Awareness

"Admirably, carefully, and cautiously reviews and synthesizes a topic that is of great interest to numerous people, including those who are fortunate enough to live with nonhuman companions, those who are lucky enough to study them, and those who are interested in other animals for a wide variety of reasons."
– Marc Bekoff, Psychology Today

"King's thoughtful, warm-hearted prose will raise awareness and amaze readers."
– Publishers Weekly

"King makes a compelling case for the rich and deep emotional lives of other animals."
– PETA

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