Karen Davis was a human being of enormous courage, often braving ridicule and mockery, who defied the cruel prevailing ideology of human domination, breaking new ground to fight fiercely and passionately on behalf of the voiceless for what is right and moral.

Karen and Rainbow...
Karen Davis died at age 79 on November 4, 2023. I lost a dear
friend, but the animals lost one of their fiercest advocates and
protectors ever in history. Karen was a towering one-of-a-kind
combination of incredible compassion, intellect, passion, vision,
and boundless energy, all coalesced into a multifaced gem of a human
being. Her work changed things for animals forever, and her legacy
will live on forever.
Karen was a pioneer, speaking, writing, and advocating brilliantly
and effectively for chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, and other
birds, who are the most exploited and abused of all the land animals
we humans torture, and kill because we like to eat their bodies and
their eggs or drink their milk. In the United States alone, we kill
approximately nine billion chickens for their flesh and torture 305
million for their eggs each year. Karen Davis became their champion,
advocating and fighting for them as no one had ever done,
publicizing and making them and their lives worthy of importance,
respect, and dignity.
Karen’s own story was unique. She received a doctorate in English
Literature from the University of Maryland, and a promising academic
career ahead. But in one of those existential moments that can
deeply unsettle us about the roles of coincidence versus fate in
shaping the trajectory of our lives, an unexpected encounter with a
crippled abandoned chicken changed Karen’s life forever, and the
lives of countless animals. Profoundly moved by this little chicken,
whom she named “Viva,” Karen gave up academia, constructed a
sanctuary for rescued chickens, and founded United Poultry Concerns
in 1990. She went on to become a respected expert on poultry issues,
lecturing and creating podcasts, and was interviewed often in the
press and on television. She wrote many books exposing the
unspeakable lives and deaths of domestic fowl, with harrowing data
and beautifully written biographies of these animals, and as a lover
of good food and a fierce vegan advocate, she wrote wonderful vegan
cookbooks as well. She testified as an expert witness, organized and
led many protests and demonstrations for these birds, including at
the White House. From her contact with the chickens and other birds
at her sanctuary as it grew over the years, she learned and wrote
knowledgeably about the personalities and high levels of cognitive
and social functioning of these birds, whom she nurtured and adored.
Karen never lost her love of literature. We would often trade
stories about books we were reading, and she shared quotes from o
many authors she knew and loved. Perhaps partly from her deep
knowledge of literature, Karen was also a keen student of the human
psyche and human behavior, as well as that of other animals, and as
a psychologist and psychoanalyst, I found her insight profound.
Karen knew about “absent referents,” as we erase the animal from our
discourse, as if “eggs” or “milk” fall from the sky, instead of
being the products of animals we torture and kill. She would point
out the differing psychological impact of instead of saying we were
eating “a chicken wing” or “a chicken leg” we would say, in truth,
that we were eating “a chicken’s leg” or “a chicken’s wing.” Try it
yourself and see the difference. In impact.
And when Karen was working on her book More Than A Meal: The
Turkey in History, Myth, Ritual, and Reality, she asked my
ideas on psychological factors in our traditional Thanksgiving
rituals. I pointed to our eager roasting of a beheaded bird, the
patriarchal positioning of the family around the turkey centerpiece,
the intimations of child abuse and sexual abuse as the turkey lay on
the platter, legs up, waiting to be violated, the violent carving
and dismembering of a body, the normalized violence of each person
spearing, cutting, chewing, and swallowing the bodies of the
slaughtered birds. Karen understood all of this.
There have been many courageous figures throughout history who have
advocated passionately for animals, eloquently and bravely defying
the prevailing ideologies of hierarchy and domination. From
Pythagoras, Plutarch, Porphyry and Ovid in Classical Antiquity on
through the centuries they spoke, flowering especially in the 19th
Century, when vegetarianism and anti-vivisectionism flourished
through the efforts of Geroge Bernard Shaw, Mahatma Gandhi, Mary
Wollstonecraft and Percy Bysshe Shelly, Henrry Salt,, Annie Besant,
Francis Powers Cobbe, and others who decried the abuses of animals
and advocated for their rights. If our planet survives to have a
history written in the future, Karen Davis will be up there with
them, as a human being of enormous courage, often braving ridicule
and mockery, who defied the cruel prevailing ideology of human
domination, breaking new ground to fight fiercely and passionately
on behalf of the voiceless for what is right and moral.
United
Poultry Concerns will continue and carry forward
Karen’s magnificent work.
Deborah Tanzer, Ph.D. is a psychologist and psychoanalyst in New York City. She is the author of Why Natural Childbirth? A Psychologist’s Report on the Benefits to Mothers, Fathers, and Babies, and has written widely on psychoanalysis, feminism, social justice, and animal rights. She is currently writing a book about the psychological connections between human violence and human treatment of animals throughout the centuries.