Friday 25 July 2008

Monkey nuts

Re the previous Monkey! post, BBC Sport have revealed their Olympics animation: see Meet Monkey.

Monkeys, with their physical resemblance to humans and their behaviour that's easy to anthropomorphise as negative human traits, must have always been creatures of abiding curiosity, and it's no accident that they turn up in Eastern mythology and literature, Journey to the West's Sun Wukong being the classic exposition of monkey nature as a mirror on human nature (the intro to Alison Waley's Dear Monkey explicitly identifies Monkey with mankind).

In the West, where we don't generally find monkeys and apes, they didn't take off in fiction until Darwin's Origin of Species. Since then, the interface between human and ape nature has been a regular topic. Charles Kingsley's The Water Babies makes a number of references to the contemporary debates on Darwinism, such as the parable of the Doasyoulikes, who through laziness devolve into apes. Darwinian nature vs nurture issues can also be viewed as the central thrust of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan series, where I think Burroughs deserves credit for being far more sophisticated than the many movie makers in anticipating a reality of cognitive development: that Tarzan couldn't learn to speak as an adult if brought up by non-speaking apes. In the original story, then, he is raised by Kala, a female of a fictitious species of speaking ape, the Mangani.

The 1920s saw an especially peculiar theme. Conan Doyle's The Adventure of the Creeping Man is well-known, a late-canon (some say substandard) Holmes story in which an elderly professor about to marry a younger woman takes an ape-based serum to obtain more vigour, with disastrous consequences. What's less known is that it was one of a number of works based on a treatment then in vogue, Serge Voronoff's monkey gland implants, which were claimed to have a rejuvenating effect. (Aside: John R Brinkley pioneered a similar treatment with goat glands; one of the segments of Accordion Crimes by Annie Proulx tells of the fate of one such recipient).

Though arguably such experiments paved the way toward genuine applications of endocrinology (i.e. hormone replacement), Voronoff is considered a quack now, but at the time was notable enough to make it into Time magazine, May 12th 1924 (see Dr. Voronoff). While the concept now seems somewhat lacking comic in potential, it inspired at least one comic novel: Bertram Gayton's The Gland Stealers - see cover image - in which a bunch of elderly gentlemen go on safari to collect gorilla glands. In France, Voronoff inspired even stranger explorations, as told in the novels of the pulp author Félicien Champsaur. His 1923 Ouha, roi des singes (Ouha, King of the Monkeys) concerns a Voronoff-like doctor and its heroine's miscegenation with a King Kong like orangutan. His 1929 Nora, la guenon devenue femme (Nora the She-Monkey Becomes a Woman) features a monkey who receives human gland implants and evolves into an alluring dancer closely modelled on Josephine Baker. Brett Berliner attributes these themes to a complex mix of anxieties about race, sex and cultural change in Jazz Age France: see Berliner, Brett A., 1960- Mephistopheles and Monkeys: Rejuvenation, Race, and Sexuality in Popular Culture in Interwar France (Journal of the History of Sexuality - Volume 13, Number 3, July 2004, pp. 306-325).

Post-Voronoff, works have tended to be less lurid, but the theme of monkey/ape as mirror to human nature continues. Examples include, of course, the Planet of The Apes series, with their strong edge of satire of racism; Keith Laumer's The Other Side of Time (not strictly involving apes, but a wonderfully convoluted parallel-reality story where the hero meets a multicultural society of hominids); and Will Self's Great Apes (NY Times review here) whose hero finds himself in a chimpanzee's body in a chimpanzee world. The book Aspects of Metamorphosis: Fictional Representations of the Becoming Human, David Barry, Desmond Asker, Rodopi, 2001, ISBN:9042012250) has a whole chapter discussing modern fiction that similarly questions human nature through being, or interacting with, apes. There's John Collier's satirical His Monkey Wife; Or Married to a Chimp (that Fuchsoid kindly mentioned in the comments); Bernard Malamud's God's Grace (a post-apocalyptic creation fable - see NY Times review); and Peter Hoeg's The Woman and the Ape (see the Penguin Reading Guide).

Self's take on the subject I find particularly telling, in that the bullying hierarchical culture is the same whether its characters are human or apes. I think that humans, singly and collectively, do far too little introspection into the "chimpy" side of their nature, which has some benefits (curiosity, adaptability and ability to work in groups toward a task) but with a downside of very chimp-like hierarchies (e.g. the urge to follow 'alpha' leader figures even when it's patently against our best interests, as well as the pressure on such leaders to appear alpha). I'm thinking of displays such as the Bush/Blair Power Walk, and the phenomenon of concealing leaders' illnesses that could affect their judgement - see Transparency with Respect to the Health of Political Leaders, Avinoam Reches, IMAJ 2006;8:751–753).

Anyhow, enough of philosophical griping. For general interest: A sampler of monkey/ape stories, in different moods, from the Web: Conan Doyle's The Adventure of the Creeping Man; Saki's The Remoulding of Groby Lington (in which the title character acquires the nature of whatever pet he keeps); and Pat Murphy's Rachel in Love (a touching story about a chimp whose perceptions are partly human due to having the transplanted personality of a scientist's dead daughter).

- Ray

Addendum: see comments for further monkey business.  Also, another one I missed: Kafka's A Report for An Academy.

4 comments:

  1. There is also John Collier's charming romance His Monkey Wife; Or Married to a Chimp, written some time in the 1930s, I think.

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  2. How about Daniel Quinn's Ishmael ? I didn't like it and can barely remember the story line, but I believe it sold well.

    -Julie

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  3. Thanks: I didn't know that one.

    Googling details for the benefit of others: yes, first published in 1930, but it's been reprinted right up to the present. The premise is that Alfred Fatigay is to marry his old girlfriend after returning from Africa with his chimp housekeeper, Emily (who is intelligent, has been taught to read, and loves Alfred). Emily sets out to disrupt the engagement, getting into all kinds of adventures (including dressing up and visiting the British Museum Reading Room to further educate herself) before she succeeds in marrying Alfred by substituting for the bride when there's a power cut during the wedding ceremony. The thrust is comic romance and social satire on civilisation and particularly (according to Anthropology and Science Fiction, Leon E. Stover, Current Anthropology, Vol. 14, No. 4 (Oct., 1973), pp. 471-474) on the work of Wolfgang Köhler. (I'll bookmark John Collier - a prolific but now little-known fantasy writer).

    On a darker note, there's Henry S. Whitehead's story Williamson (in Peter Haining's The Unspeakable People horror anthology), written in a 1910 as Whitehead's first story but only published in 1946, 14 years after his death. It concerns Williamson Morley, a friend of the narrator, who is enigmatic in a number of ways: astonishingly strong, won't undress and shower after sports, native servants jittery around him, etc. It's revealed that his mother as attacked by an orangutan called Billy and, well, you can see where we're going, finally all is revealed when Morley burns his hands and the narrator finds him brushing his hair using his feet. As a story, it's not actually that dark; it's sympathetic toward Williamson, and ends wryly with the comment that he's a better man than his father.

    The Stover paper, BTW, mentions Thomas Love Peacock's 1817 Melincourt - see "Peacock's Sir Oran Haut-ton: Byron's Bear or Shelley's Ape? - whose hero is an intelligent orangutan - a novelisation of the ideas of James Burnett, Lord Monboddo.

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  4. Thanks re Ishmael (and I see it has a sequel, My Ishmael). They look a bit too didactic for my taste, but there's a connection I didn't know - the loose film adaptation, Instinct, which covered the same themes of sustainability, wrongness of pecking orders based on power, etc. I did enjoy that one.

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