[Home]History of Cannibalism

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Revision 17 . . (edit) June 29, 2001 5:28 am by KoyaanisQatsi
Revision 16 . . June 29, 2001 5:21 am by Lee Daniel Crocker [Better balanced?]
Revision 15 . . June 28, 2001 9:59 am by (logged).178.196.xxx
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 3c3
It is worth noting that early reports of human cannibalism are somewhat suspect. During the years of British colonial expansion slavery was actually considered to be illegal, unless the people involved were so depraved that their conditions as slaves would be better than as free men. Demonstration of cannibalistic tendencies were consiered evidence for this, and hence reports of cannibalism became widespread. Other more contemporary reports have also been called into question. The well known case of mortuary cannabilism in New Guinea which resulted in the spread of the disease kuru has also been questioned by those claiming that although post-mortem dismemberment was the practice during funeral rites, cannabilism was not.
It is worth noting that early reports of human cannibalism are somewhat suspect. During the years of British colonial expansion slavery was actually considered to be illegal, unless the people involved were so depraved that their conditions as slaves would be better than as free men. Demonstration of cannibalistic tendencies were considered evidence for this, and hence reports of cannibalism became widespread. Other more contemporary reports have also been called into question. The well known case of mortuary cannabilism of the Fore tribe in New Guinea which resulted in the spread of the disease Kuru has also been questioned by those claiming that although post-mortem dismemberment was the practice during funeral rites, cannabilism was not. This case, however, is well documented and not seriously questioned by modern anthropologists. Fijian cannibalism is also generally accepted as historically factual.

Changed: 5c5
For some species, cannibalism under certain well-defined circumstances, such as the female black widow spider eating the male after mating, is a common, if not inveriable, part of the life cycle. In vertebrates (except for many fish), cannibalism is not generaly observed to be uniformly routine or widespread for any given species, but may develop in extremis such as captivity, or a desperate food shortage. For instance, a domestic sow may eat her newborn young, though this behavior has not been observed in the wild. It is also known that mice and rats will eat their young if their nest is repeatedly threatened by predators. In some species adults are known to destroy and sometimes eat young of their species to whom they are not closely related--famously, the chimpanzee?s observed by Dr. [Jane Goodall]?.
For some species, cannibalism under certain well-defined circumstances, such as the female black widow spider eating the male after mating, is believed to be a common, if not invariable, part of the life cycle. In vertebrates (except for many fish), cannibalism is not generaly observed to be uniformly routine or widespread for any given species, but may develop in extremis such as captivity, or a desperate food shortage. For instance, a domestic sow may eat her newborn young, though this behavior has not been observed in the wild. It is also known that mice and rats will eat their young if their nest is repeatedly threatened by predators. In some species adults are known to destroy and sometimes eat young of their species to whom they are not closely related--famously, the chimpanzee?s observed by Dr. [Jane Goodall]?. Some of these observations have been questioned (for example by [Stephen J. Gould]?) as possible products of sloppy research. For example, while there are many observations of female praying mantises eating their mates after copulation, there are no known observations of this occurring in the wild; it has only been observed in captivity.

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