SARX: Christian Animal Welfare
September 2018
I think that understanding the mechanisms of socially constructed silence and denial is hugely important for those who wish to engage in fruitful conversations about animal rights... I have personal experience of a kind of socially constructed silence about animal rights even in Christian communities which otherwise do a lot regarding environmental matters.
Dr Panu Pihkala of the University of Helsinki uncovers and challenges the socially constructed silence which facilitates so much of today’s animal suffering.
Elephant in the Room. People know about it, but somehow they find ways
not to speak about it. Everybody just seems to be pretending not to notice
it.
The scholar Eviatar Zerubavel has done pioneering work in revealing the
mechanism of “socially constructed silence”. Zerubavel’s research deals
especially with atrocities and the ways in which societies develop silence
about them. In a curious way, even if nobody ever sat down and made a deal
about it, people act as if there was a secret contract to keep them all
silent.
Socially constructed silence is linked with states of denial – the topic of
another important scholar, Stanley Cohen. People are astoundingly capable of
knowing and not knowing at the same time. Things that are too uncomfortable
are pushed out of the view.
A fine way to reveal if socially constructed silence and denial are around
is to try to speak about an issue that people find uncomfortable. Scholars
of climate change, such as George Marshall, have described the effect as “an
invisible force field”. When one tries to raise up the issue, one bumps into
the force field. Nothing seems to get through. People start to regard you as
suspicious, as one who is not like us, as one who causes trouble.
Does this sound familiar to people who have tried to discuss animal rights?
In my experience, very much so. I think that understanding the mechanisms of
socially constructed silence and denial is hugely important for those who
wish to engage in fruitful conversations about animal rights.
People in principle know that numerous animals are not treated kindly, but
they try not to know this, because the truth is too uncomfortable. The role
of peer pressure and flock behavior is strong. For example, it is often
difficult to raise up the issue of the prevailing habits of meat production,
because people fear the reactions of other people. Only when the socially
constructed silence is broken by a large enough or skillful enough number of
people who raise the issue, do others have the courage to face the topic.
Feelings of guilt and shame are often behind socially constructed silence
and denial. Guilt that is only partly realized builds up pressure, which
easily explodes into angry reactions when someone raises a troublesome
issue. I think that many people who have not yet done lifestyle changes
because of animal rights questions still do feel guilt about the fact that
others are suffering because of them. On some deep level, they would like to
be able live in ways which enable animals to live better lives, but they are
unable to find courage to engage in a process of change – especially because
this would cause them trouble among their peers.
Thus, providing people means to gradually come to grips with their guilt is
elementary in overcoming the problematic situation. This is where religious
communities have an important role, for they have usually developed
sophisticated forms of providing opportunities for processing guilt.
Naturally religious communities themselves are also under forms of socially
constructed silence about many topics, but basically they have something
hugely important to contribute. There is evidently also a need to develop
rituals for non-religious people to enable them to process their guilt, but
that’s a tricky task.
Christians have a very mixed history as regards environmentalism and animal
rights. On one hand, there have been highly important Christian pioneers on
these fields. On the other hand, there is a long legacy of Christian
communities remaining silent about several of these issues. The gap between
Christian ecotheology in general and animal theology in particular has
contributed to this theme. I have personal experience of a kind of socially
constructed silence about animal rights even in Christian communities which
otherwise do a lot regarding environmental matters.
In the 2010s, scholars such as Kari Marie Norgaard have applied socially
constructed silence into climate change. Now there is a need to apply it
further into animal rights discussion. The first steps are to ask, from
ourselves and our community members: what are the things that we are silent
about? Deep down, how do we feel about animals and the environment? What
emotions are there, perhaps hiding just beneath the surface? How could we
together move towards a future where we wouldn’t have to hide our feelings
and be secretly ashamed of some of our behavior?
It is not easy to break socially constructed silence. But when that happens,
the experience can be hugely liberating for people – and, in this case, for
the animals.
Dr. Panu Pihkala is a Postdoctoral researcher in religion and environment, University of Helsinki and Chairperson at A Rocha Finland.