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The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan

Wasik & Murphy On Animal Welfare

The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan

Andrew Sullivan

Politics, News, Religion & Spirituality

4.6836 Ratings

🗓️ 4 October 2024

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.com

Bill Wasik is the editorial director of The New York Times Magazine. Monica Murphy is a veterinarian and a writer. Their first book, Rabid: A Cultural History of the World’s Most Diabolical Virus, was a bestseller, and they’re back with a new one: Our Kindred Creatures: How Americans Came to Feel the Way They Do About Animals.

For two clips of our convo — on the beginnings of dog welfare, and the “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” for animal activism — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: writing a book as a married couple; the mass extinctions of early America; bison at the brink; how horses increased after the Industrial Revolution and drove the early movement for animal welfare; “the best humanitarian ideas came from England”; bullfighting in Spain; the profound role and colorful character of Henry Bergh; his founding of the ASPCA; the absence of vegetarianism among early activists; PT Barnum’s sympathy and exploitation; transporting Beluga whales by train; the public clashes between Barnum and Bergh; journalism’s role in animal welfare; George Angell’s magazine Our Dumb Animals; the anti-slavery Atlantic Monthly; animal activism growing out of abolitionism; Darwin; Romanticism; George Bird Grinnell and first Audubon Society; fashion and consumerism; wearing hats with whole birds; the emotional lives of dogs; the activism around strays; the brutality of early shelters; rabies and dog catchers; Louis Pasteur and the rabies vaccine; Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty; how she was robbed of royalties; the treatment of horses in Central Park; reform movements driven by elites; class resentment; Animal Farm and Watership Down; the cruelty of today’s food industry; pig crates; Pope Francis; and Matthew Scully’s Dominion.

Browse the Dishcast archive for an episode you might enjoy (the first 102 are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Walter Kirn on his political evolution, Musa al-Gharbi on wokeness, Sam Harris for our quadrennial chat before Election Day, and Damon Linker on the election results. Wait, there’s more: Peggy Noonan on America, Anderson Cooper on grief, Christine Rosen on humanness in a digital world, Mary Matalin on anything but politics, and John Gray on, well, everything.

Please send any guest recs, dissents, and other comments to [email protected].

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The Hey there, Descheds. Here we are again. I'm here on a beautiful, beautiful fall afternoon in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where I am still blessed to be living.

0:39.7

We've had a couple of really exciting new acceptances for forthcoming guests. We have

0:43.9

Anderson Cooper's going to come on, my old friend, and we're going to talk about grief,

0:48.0

which is subject to his new podcast series, which is doing phenomenally well. And John Gray,

0:53.1

the great British political philosopher, is coming on to talk about where

0:57.7

we are in the world.

0:59.1

What's actually happening with the American election?

1:01.5

What's happening in Europe in particular?

1:03.6

Anyway, John always has epic, big thoughts, and I know last time, Y'all loved him.

1:09.7

So he's coming back.

1:12.6

And also, Sam Harris,

1:18.1

we've done this every four years now. We both get together before an election and say how bummed out we are by everything and then try and get ourselves to decide who to vote for.

1:23.1

So we're going to do that again this year, the great and powerful Sam Harris, as Joe Rogen says, coming on.

1:30.6

The pod, and this week, a subject I've always been fascinated by, I know many of you are too, and this time I dive into the history of it.

1:39.7

Animal welfare, animal cruelty, the benefits and needs and of the animal world.

1:49.2

And an amazingly book has come out, which I devoured this summer, our kindred creatures,

1:56.6

how Americans came to feel the way they do about animals.

2:00.1

And it's by Bill Wasek, he was the editorial director of the New York Times Magazine,

2:04.6

and Monica Murphy, who's a vet and a writer.

2:07.6

And their first book, Rabid, The Cultural History of the World's Most Diabolical Virus, was a bestseller.

2:13.6

This one, has it become a bestseller? It should be.

2:16.6

Not as far as we've heard yet,

...

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