Article FTE0 Cecil the lion was doomed from the moment he got his name

Cecil the lion was doomed from the moment he got his name

by
Philip Hoare
from on (#FTE0)

Give an animal a cute name and its fate is sealed. The act reduces magnificent beasts to toys of humankind - and the next step is often extinction

Cecil the lion? Shot by a Minnesotan dentist with a bow and arrow. Maurius the giraffe? Fed to his fellow inmates in a Copenhagen zoo. Knut the polar bear? Died of stress in front of 600 Berliners. Give an animal a name, and its fate is sealed. If the ultimate sin in biological science is anthropomorphy, we sure are guilty. By naming a wild animal, it is instantly appropriated, and demeaned. It becomes acculturated, part of our human discourse. Cecil's end was in sight as soon as he was christened; he became a target as sure as if someone had drawn a bull's eye on his rump. Gloriously maned he might have been, but he was emasculated by his name, much as Clarence the cross-eyed lion, of the 1960s TV series Daktari, or even the dolorous Parsley the Lion, of The Herbs, were.

Related: Killer of Cecil the lion was dentist from Minnesota, claim Zimbabwe officials

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