“Where Butchers Sing Like Angels,” Of Captive Bodies and Colonized Minds (With a Little Help from Louise Erdrich)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.7650

Keywords:

Louise Erdrich, decoloniality, species war, normative humanity

Abstract

The Master Butchers Signing Club – Louise Erdrich’s “countehistory” (Natalie Eppelsheimer) of the declared and undeclared wars of Western patriarchy–depicts a world where butchering, when done with precision and expertise, approximates art. Fidelis Waldvogel, whose name means literally Faithful Forestbird, is a sensitive German boy turned the first-rate sniper in the First World War and master butcher in his adult life in America. When Fidelis revisits his homeland after the slaughter of World War II, Delphine, his second wife, has a vision of smoke and ashes bursting out of the mouths of the master butchers singing onstage in a masterful harmony of voices. Why it is only Delphine, an outsider in the Western world, that can see the crematorium-like reality overimposed on the bucolic scenery of a small German town? Drawing on decolonial and Critical Animal Studies, this article tries to demystify some of the norms and normativities we live by.  

Author Biography

Małgorzata Poks, University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland

Małgorzata Poks, PhD is an assistant professor at the Institute of Literary Studies, Faculty of Humanities, at the University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. Her main research interests revolve around contemporary North American Literature, Indigenous Studies, US-Mexican border writing, Critical Animal Studies, Christian anarchism, Thomas Merton’s late poetry. She has published widely in Poland and abroad. Her monograph Thomas Merton and Latin America: a Consonance of Voices (2006) received the International Thomas Merton Award and in her article “Home on the Border: in Ana Castillo's The Guardians: The Colonial Matrix of Power, Epistemic Disobedience, and Decolonial Love” was awarded the 2019 Javier Coy Biennial Research Award. Poks is also a recipient of several international research fellowships.

References

Adams, Carol and Matthew Calarco. “Derrida and the Sexual Politics of Meat.” Meat Culture, edited by Annie Potts. Brill, 2017, pp. 31-52.

Agamben, Giorgio. The Open. Translated by Kevin Attell, Stanford UP, 2004.

Ausenfeld, Thomas. “German Politics and Culture in Louise Erdrich’s The Master Butcher’s Singing Club. Great Plains Quarterly, no. 26, 2006, pp. 3-11.

Cooling, Sarat. “Animal Agency, Resistance and Escape.” Critical Animal Studies: Towards Trans-Species Social Justice, edited by Atsuko Matsuoka and John Sorenson. Rowman and Littlefield International, 2018, pp. 21-44.

Dekha, Maneesha. “The Subhuman as a Cultural Agent of Violence.” Women of Color in Critical Animal Studies, special issue of Journal of Critical Animal Studies, vol. 8, no.3, 2010, pp. 28-51.

Erdrich, Louise. The Master Butchers Singing Club. Harper Collins, 2003.

Grosfoguel, Ramon. “Decolonizing Political Economy and Postcolonial Studies: Transmodernity, Border thinking, and Global Coloniality.” Humandee: Human Management and Development. July 4, 2008, http://www.humandee.org/. Accessed 25 March, 2019.

Hogan, Linda. “Dawn for All Time.” The Radiant Life of Animals (upcoming),

https://www.academia.edu/31773069/E_3_essays_The_Radiant_Life_with_Animals.

Accessed 25 April, 2019.

hooks, bell. “Choosing the Margin as a Space of Radical Openness.” Yearnings, Race, Gender and Cultural Politics. South End P, 1989, pp.203-209.

Ko, Syl. “Notes from the Border of the Human-Animal Divide.” Aphro-ism: Essays on Pop Culture, Feminism, and Black Veganism from Two Sisters by Aph and Syl Ko. Lantern Books, 2017, pp. 70-75.

ochi, Tarik. “Species War: Law, Violence and Animals, Law, Culture And the Humanities, vol. 5, 2009, pp. 353-369.

Maldonado-Torres, Nelson. Against War: Views from the Underside of Modernity. Duke University Press, 2008.

Mignolo, Walter. “Epistemic Disobedience, Independent Thought and De-Colonial Freedom,” waltermignolo.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/epistemicdisobedience-2.pdf

---. “On Pluriversality. waltermignolo.com/on-pluriversality. Accessed 23 March, 2019.

Native American Philosophy of V.F Cordova. Edited by Kathleen Moore, Kurt Peters, Ted

Jojola, and Amber Lacy, with a foreword by Linda Hogan. U of Arizona P, 2007.

Nibert, David A. Animal Oppression and Human Violence: Domesacration, Capitalism, and

Global Conflict, Columbia UP, 2013.

Parenti, Michael. “Lies, Wars, and Empire,” lecture, May 12, 2007, Antioch University, Seattle,

Wash, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZTrY3TQpzw. Accessed 8 March, 2019.

Patterson, Charles. Eternal Treblinka: Our Treatment of Animals and the Holocaust. Lantern

Books, 2002.

Rowe, John Carlos. Afterlives of Modernism: Liberalism, Transnationalism, and Political

Critique. Dartmouth College Press, 2011.

Sandburg, Carl. “Chicago.” Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, March 1914, vol. 3, no. 6, pp. 191-

Sepie, Amba J. “More than Stories, More than Myths: Animal/Human/Nature(s) in Traditional

Ecological Worldviews. Humanities, vol. 6, no. 4, 2017.

Serpell, James. In the Company of Animals: A Study of Human-Animal Relationships. 1986.

Cambridge University Press, 1996.

“Snipers in the First World War.” Spartacus Educational. www.spartacus-educational.com.

Accessed 26 March, 2019.

Steel, Karl. How to Make a Human: Animals and Violence in the Middle Ages. Ohio State UP,

Sullivan, Shannon and Nancy Tuana, editors. Race and Epistemologies of Ignorance. State U

of New York P, 2007.

“The Union Stockyards.” Chicago Stories. WTTW. https://interactive.wttw.com/a/chicago-

stories-union-stockyards. Accessed 26 March, 2019.

Wadiwel, Dinesh. The War Against Animals. Brill, 2015.

Published

2020-08-16

How to Cite

Poks, M. (2020). “Where Butchers Sing Like Angels,” Of Captive Bodies and Colonized Minds (With a Little Help from Louise Erdrich). Review of International American Studies, 13(1), 123–144. https://doi.org/10.31261/rias.7650