Adults Together

Americans who spend time with common mammalian companion animals do not typically spend much time around reproductively mature animals, as laws and cultures support the widespread spaying and neutering of pets (with some significant exceptions). However, one important population of humans and anima...

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Main Author: Jeannette Vaught
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Humanimalia 2023-03-01
Series:Humanimalia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://humanimalia.org/article/view/13276
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author Jeannette Vaught
author_facet Jeannette Vaught
author_sort Jeannette Vaught
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description Americans who spend time with common mammalian companion animals do not typically spend much time around reproductively mature animals, as laws and cultures support the widespread spaying and neutering of pets (with some significant exceptions). However, one important population of humans and animals does not entirely match this trend: horse people. While male companion horses are very commonly castrated, or “gelded,” female horses are almost universally allowed to mature into fully reproductive individuals. For many animal enthusiasts, mares are the only reproductively mature mammals other than humans that they ever spend time with. This lack of experience with full animal maturity, in its physical and behavioral senses, has shaped human paradigms for relating to mares. The female body of the companion horse, then, because it is at once fully chaste and also fully sexualized unlike any other nonhuman body most humans are exposed to, is both a body to be managed and a uniquely effective screen on which to project complex cultural values and gendered anxieties. Starting with an interdisciplinary examination of the veterinary practice of pharmaceutically regulating mares’ hormones, followed by analysis of public discourses in art, literature, and social media that interpellate relationships between mares and women, this essay argues that contemporary techniques of disciplining the sexual maturity of mares have deep historical and cultural roots. This essay also expands a growing body of work that includes material multispecies relationships within sexuality studies. By attending to the strategies through which full adulthood and maturity are not afforded to companion animals, we can see how stubborn patriarchal patterns become persistently embedded in familial multispecies relationships.
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spelling doaj.art-7136b57661334446abfd31a4884a74a12023-10-18T08:38:15ZengHumanimaliaHumanimalia2151-86452023-03-0113210.52537/humanimalia.13276Adults TogetherJeannette Vaught0California State University, Los Angeles Americans who spend time with common mammalian companion animals do not typically spend much time around reproductively mature animals, as laws and cultures support the widespread spaying and neutering of pets (with some significant exceptions). However, one important population of humans and animals does not entirely match this trend: horse people. While male companion horses are very commonly castrated, or “gelded,” female horses are almost universally allowed to mature into fully reproductive individuals. For many animal enthusiasts, mares are the only reproductively mature mammals other than humans that they ever spend time with. This lack of experience with full animal maturity, in its physical and behavioral senses, has shaped human paradigms for relating to mares. The female body of the companion horse, then, because it is at once fully chaste and also fully sexualized unlike any other nonhuman body most humans are exposed to, is both a body to be managed and a uniquely effective screen on which to project complex cultural values and gendered anxieties. Starting with an interdisciplinary examination of the veterinary practice of pharmaceutically regulating mares’ hormones, followed by analysis of public discourses in art, literature, and social media that interpellate relationships between mares and women, this essay argues that contemporary techniques of disciplining the sexual maturity of mares have deep historical and cultural roots. This essay also expands a growing body of work that includes material multispecies relationships within sexuality studies. By attending to the strategies through which full adulthood and maturity are not afforded to companion animals, we can see how stubborn patriarchal patterns become persistently embedded in familial multispecies relationships. https://humanimalia.org/article/view/13276marehorseTwitterLandseerReguMateAnnie Gilbert
spellingShingle Jeannette Vaught
Adults Together
Humanimalia
mare
horse
Twitter
Landseer
ReguMate
Annie Gilbert
title Adults Together
title_full Adults Together
title_fullStr Adults Together
title_full_unstemmed Adults Together
title_short Adults Together
title_sort adults together
topic mare
horse
Twitter
Landseer
ReguMate
Annie Gilbert
url https://humanimalia.org/article/view/13276
work_keys_str_mv AT jeannettevaught adultstogether