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Brigid Brophy |
Brigid Brophy
Born Brigid Antonia Brophy, Lady Levey. She lived from
June 12, 1929 to August 7, 1995. She was an English writer, a feminist,
a pacifist, an atheist, openly bisexual and expressed controversial
opinions on many issues, including marriage, religious education in
school, the Vietnam War, sex and pornography. She was a vocal campaigner
for human and animal rights. She was married to Michael Levey and they
had one daughter. She died of multiple sclerosis at the age of 66.
Click here
to see some of the books
she has written.
An article that Brigid Brophy wrote for the Sunday
Times in 1965 has been credited with helping to spark the Animal Rights
movement in England. She had been invited to write a full-page article
on a subject of her own choice. She gave it the title "The Rights of
Animals", by deliberate extrapolation from the title of Thomas Paine's
book "The Rights of Man". Her article included the following
quote:
| "The relationship of homo sapiens to the
other animals is one of unremitting exploitation. We employ
their work; we eat and wear them. We exploit them to serve our
superstitions: whereas we used to sacrifice them to our gods and
tear out their entrails in order to foresee the future, we now
sacrifice them to science, and experiment on their entrail in
the hope — or on the mere offchance — that we might thereby see
a little more clearly into the present." |
|
| In 1977, she talked about
why she had named the article "The Rights of Animals": |
| "I invoked The Rights of Man because it is
classically associated with two Revolutions, the French and the
American, which were the occasions of quite convulsive
adjustment to our vision to correct for the distortions
introduced by the class barriers of feudalism and empire.
I invoked rights, because rights are a matter of
respect and justice, which are constant and can be required of
you by force of argument; they are not matters of love, which is
capricious and quite involuntary." |
Other quotes by Brigid Brophy:
| "When I became a vegetarian I don’t think
I had knowingly ever met a fellow vegetarian." |
|
| "I don't myself believe that, even when we
fulfil our minimum obligations not to cause pain, we have the
right to kill animals. I know I would not have the right to kill
you, however painlessly, just because I liked your flavour, and
I am not in a position to judge that your life is worth more to
you than the animal's to it." |
|
| "I don't hold animals superior or even
equal to humans. The whole case for behaving decently to animals
rests on the fact that we are the superior species. We are the
species uniquely capable of imagination, rationality, and moral
choice and that is precisely why we are under an obligation to
recognize and respect the rights of animals." |
|
| "As it happens, I am fond of most
individuals of most animal species I meet, though since I lead a
sedentary urban life it’s fairly easy for me to avoid meeting
the ones I’m likely not to like. But I trust that my refusal to
harm them wantonly is independent of whether I like them or not,
just as I trust that your refusal to do the same to me, even if
you were sure of getting away with it, is independent of whether
you like me – and indeed, of whether you think you would like
the flavour of me roasted." |
|
| "That I like the flavour of mutton no more
entitles me to kill a sheep than a taste for roast leg of
human would entitle me to kill you. To argue that we humans are
capable of complex, multifarious
thought and feeling, whereas the sheep’s experience is probably
limited by lowly sheepish
perceptions, is no more to the point than if I were to slaughter
and eat you on the grounds that I am
a sophisticated personality able to enjoy Mozart, formal logic
and cannibalism, whereas your
imaginative world seems confined to True Romances and tinned
spaghetti." |
|
| "the high barrier we have
put up between the human species and all the rest of the animal
species, the barrier to which Richard Ryder presently gave the
very useful name of ‘speciesism’, was essentially a class
barrier, unjustified by reason and kept in place by the
superstition and self-interest of those who were on the
privileged side of it." |
|
| "we are engaged in the revolutionary
enterprise of demolishing a class barrier; many of the normal
mechanisms for changing things are denied us, but two are not,
namely forming a popular front and raising the political
consciousness of the citizens (which in this case means raising
consciousness of the fact that animals are individuals and have
rights); and in our struggle there are real lives to be saved." |
|
| "when I feed the pigeons, I shut my cat
out of the room. This is a small infringement of his rights,
imposed on him by me by main force. I think it is justified, in
the interest of the pigeons’ rights, because if I didn’t he
would surely have one of my plump, peanutfed pigeons for his
lunch. If I lunched on a pigeon, I should think myself
immoral. If you do so, I must in honesty say I think you
immoral. But I don’t think my cat immoral. I think him amoral.
The whole dimension of morality doesn’t apply to him, or
scarcely applies to him." |
|
| "When one talks about untouched jungle,
perhaps the answer is simple: the jungle is the amoral world of
other animals, and our only moral obligation to it is to keep
out." |
|
| "The bull-fighter who
torments a bull to death and then castrates it of an ear has
neither proved nor
increased his own virility; he has merely demonstrated that he
is a butcher with balletic tendencies." |
|
| "The person who kills for fun is
announcing that, could he get away with it, he'd kill you for
fun. Your...life may be of no consequence to anyone else but is
invaluable to you because it's the only one you've got. Exactly
the same is true of each individual deer, hare, rabbit, fox,
fish, pheasant and butterfly. Humans should enjoy their own
lives, not taking others'. " |
|
| "Euthanasia is the sole instance in which
we behave better to the other animals than to our own species." |
|
| "Whenever people say “We mustn’t be
sentimental,” you can take it they are about to do something
cruel. And if they add “We must be realistic,” they mean they
are going to make money out of it." |
|
| "the proanimal movement has its front
line, as well as its think-tanks and secretariats and supply
lines, and that at the front line animal lives are saved and
human freedoms are, very bravely, risked." |
Quotes are from Brigid Brophy's 1977 article
The Darwinist's Dilemma, the 1971 book
Animals, Men, and Morals: An Enquiry into the Maltreatment of Non-Humans
and Brigid Brophy's article "The Rights of Animals" which appeared in
the Sunday Times in 1965. |