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to the fact that some among us experience some animals as their companions, while others can kill and eat them without blinking an eye? This is a question of being unable to imagine an embodied sense of the extinction of another. Our knowledge of our vulnerability to death is wounding in the light of what we do to animals both in reality and as an allegory of what we do to each other, as humans.

      We might want to be reminded at this point of Diamond’s observation that from some perspectives, the examples she offers would not cause any disquiet. But she feels that the entire response to her woundedness offered as erudite arguments is to deflect the issues and inflict hurt of a different order. As an example, I remember discussing with a colleague how I felt unhinged reading some articles in defense of torture after I had heard an almost primitive cry wrenched out from the mother of a torture survivor, and this colleague responding with “different people are entitled to have different views” said sympathetically, yet not connecting to my sense of what was at stake at all. But the difficulty this raises for philosophy, which is that of the impossibility of thinking itself, is of one order – I want to say that the difficulty of what this means to go on within a community, with kin and with neighbors, who have or are suspected to have engaged in killings and rape might be of a different order. I am aware of all the work on forgiveness and reconciliation but with few exceptions most scholars take this work to be that of the individual subject and not of the way the social is brought to bear on these issues or the work of time (see the remarkable work of Osanloo 2020 in this context, though; see also Das 2021).

      More powerful than even the words, though, was the way that the women sat in silence outside their houses refusing to bring mourning to an end … the women were often scared to speak out, but their gestures of mourning that went on and on and on showed the deeply altered meaning of death … the women defiantly hung on to their filth and their pollution. They would not go into the houses, they would not light the cooking hearths, they would not change their clothes … the small heaps of ashes (remains of the fires on which bodies were burnt), the abandoned houses, the blood splattered walls created a funeral landscape, the sight of the women with their unwashed bodies and unbraided hair was a potent sign that mourning and protest were part of the same event. (Das 2007: 195)

      It is interesting to me that Diamond does not take up the other registers in Coetzee’s novel – for instance the texture of interactions within the domestic scenes when Mrs. Costello realizes that the grandchildren are eating in the playroom because they are going to have chicken soup, and their grandmother does not like meat on the table while their mother does not want to make any concessions to what she calls with obvious irony, her mother-in-law’s “delicate sensitivities.” In what way would these quotidian interactions change the feeling of abuse that pervades the lecture hall? Mrs. Costello’s disappointments are with the philosophers. At one point in the novel she says “Even Immanuel Kant of whom I would have expected better, has a failure of nerve at this point. Even Kant does not pursue, with regard to animals, the implications of his intuition that reason may be not the being of the universe but on the contrary merely the being of the human brain” (Coetzee 2003: 67).

      What Diamond makes of this impulse in the novel, however, is something more than the fact that philosophers disappoint her. It is thinking itself which fails in the face of these difficulties of reality. But what if we asked, but how do people live with or endure such knowledge?

      The following chapters are not organized around each of these issues separately – rather the questions I opened the book with run through the book like streams that run into each other throughout. I give here, a brief account of what to expect in the following chapters.

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