Jump to content

Anne Irving

Members
  • Posts

    1
  • Joined

  • Last visited

 Content Type 

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2016

Sept/Oct 2016.2

Past Editions in PDF format

Advertorials

Focus Magazine July/August 2016

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2017

Focus Magazine March/April 2017

Passages

Local Lens

Focus Magazine May/June 2017

Focus Magazine July/August2017

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2017

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2017

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2018

Focus Magazine March/April 2018

Focus Magazine May/June 2018

Focus Magazine July/August 2018

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2018

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2018

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2019

Focus Magazine March/April 2019

Focus Magazine May/June 2019

Focus Magazine July/August 2019

Focus Magazine Sept/Oct 2019

Focus Magazine Nov/Dec 2019

Focus Magazine Jan/Feb 2020

Focus Magazine March-April 2020

COVID-19 Pandemic

Navigating through pandemonium

Informed Comment

Palette

Earthrise

Investigations

Reporting

Analysis

Commentary

Letters

Development and architecture

Books

Forests

Controversial developments

Gallery

Forums

Downloads

Blogs

Events

Everything posted by Anne Irving

  1. Thank you for the article. I did not expect it to change my mind from leaning heavily on the hunter for 100% of the blame for Takaya's death. You are correct, we should examine our culture. Takaya's seems almost an accidental death. It does indeed require a concerted effort to live with wolves, predators and other large mammals. It seems terribly important in this moment to examine the violence with which we view all the other animal species born to our time. From wolves and cougars, to elephants and fish. We create trophy hunters. We made this person when we told our child: take care of this world, and without care we placed a dead animal on their plate. She saw how we built awkward justifications for why it is okay to only speak about care for the world but to continue to live with violence in our kitchen. We put a corpse on her plate and we told her: its okay to treat animals as food. We do not like the flavour of plant proteins as much, or we've always done it this way. My mother told me: we can't digest plants. I told my son: you've been hanging around with vegetarians, some people eat meat, others don't. These are awkward illogical gymnastics we deploy in order to build a structure that will allow us continue to feast on corpses of animals. Our children saw how dishonest we were when we said: take care. We have become like the villains we grew up with: "Hansel, stretch out your finger that I may see if it is fat enough to eat" or the giant in Jack and the Beanstalk who threatens: "I'll grind your bones to make my bread". We live violently, three times a day. Takaya touched our hearts because we felt he saw us, and held us to a standard of care. We must see ourselves with honesty.
×
×
  • Create New...