Leda, raped in her sleep by the Zeus-swan |
The
free newspapers on the London Underground are obsessed with it. This week’s story
featured a Nigerian named Malam Kamisu Baranda, arrested for having sex with
his goat. He argues in his own defence that he asked her for her permission first.
A heartbreaking tale two weeks ago featured a British vagrant caught on
camcorder apparently copulating with his dog inside the sleeping bag they
shared. She was taken into care and he has been banned from dog ownership for
three years.
Ancient art captures the brutality |
My
problem is that people legally do all kinds of (arguably much worse) things to
animals without seeking their consent—coerced hard labour and lactation, artificial
insemination, castration, experiments in laboratories; undermining their dignity with
stupid costumes and circus tricks, riding, caging, electrocuting and eating
them.
'Love Will Find a Way' |
Sex
between humans and animals was explored more intelligently in Greek narratives.
When gods raped women in the form of fauna, as Zeus raped Leda in the form of a
swan, his animalization is an implicit acknowledgement that forcibly
penetrating another human is an act of subhuman violence.
'You look so like your father' |
Greek
poetry and art is remarkably sympathetic to Pasiphae. In her cold husband’s long
absences she fell in love with her handsome bull. One Greek vase shows her
tenderly burping the resulting baby Minotaur, a fulfilled mother at last. Pasiphae’s
emotional bond reminds me of my (long deceased) childhood piano teacher, a
lonely childless widow who treated her Old English Sheepdog like a husband,
embracing him on her sofa, including him in all conversations, asking him
whether he preferred Mozart to Brahms, getting jealous if he paid other human
women attention, and sharing her bed (although I do doubt her body) with him.
Lucian's Ass Consents |
Best
of all are the closing scenes in an ancient Greek version of the traditional
story of the man turned into an ass, the Ass
attributed to Lucian. These contrast two scenes in which the Ass-hero accepts
and declines sex with a woman. In the first, he tells us that he
enthusiastically made love to a lovely rich lady who plied him with delicious
food in her luxurious boudoir. In the second, he is exploitatively required to penetrate
a female convict publicly outdoors, as an amphitheatre spectacle, and manages
to escape in the nick of time. Perhaps the moral is that when speculating about animals’ attitudes to sex with humans, we shouldn't make blanket generalisations.
I
am going to email Metro newspaper to offer a series ‘Greek
zoophiliac myth of the week’ so commuters can satisfy their voyeuristic hunger
for such stories while perhaps thinking harder about what they might signify. I will
let you know how the editors respond to the offer in due course.
Interesting commentary. One correction however. Forty-one of the fifty US states have specific prohibitions against bestiality. The remaining nine consider it animal abuse if the animal is injured, and sometimes use laws retaling to sexual assault or morals when a report of bestiality occurs.
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