Regardless of what historical epoch their populations and
culture are either based on or situated in, epic fantasy landscapes tend
to be populated by a very specific subset of animals: big cats, horses,
wolves, bears, deer, birds of prey, European livestock (cattle, sheep,
chickens), domestic pets, rabbits, and dragons. Though you might
occasionally find some ferrets, snakes or crocodiles to spice things up,
generally speaking, there’s a profound Eurocentrism to the kind of
animals you’ll encounter in fantasy novels, partly because the default
fantasy environment is itself Eurocentric; and partly because, once
you’re using less common animals, there’s the joint question of how to
describe and reference them if their English names are either very
clearly colonial or derive their meaning from a clearly real-world
scientific canon (Thompson’s gazelle, the red panda, the Pallas cat, for
instance); but mostly, I suspect, because we view such creatures as
being universally generic, and therefore able to transcend affiliation
to any particular country or region. By way of comparison, I can’t think
of a single fantasy novel where kangaroos make an appearance: though
fascinating creatures, both physically and aesthetically, their
inclusion would inevitably make the reader think of Australia regardless
of whether such an association would benefit the story, and so we tend
not to take the risk. The exception to this rule, of course, is when
writers are deliberately trying to evoke a particular sense of place:
under those circumstances, the inclusion of certain animals becomes a
type of narrative signposting, so that giraffes mean Africa, pandas mean
China, yak mean Tibet, pet monkeys mean the Middle East, and so on.
Otherwise, though you don’t get much variety – and under some
circumstances, that’s fine. But when we start treating animals as
generic, there’s a very real loss of ecosystem: though perhaps
unremarkable to the sensibilities and assumptions of urban readers, all
those quest-inducing forests, swamps and mountains tend to be either
totally devoid of animal life (except for a plethora of conveniently
edible rabbits), or else serve as the backdrop for a single, climactic
animal attack (usually from a bear or wolves). And with that loss of
ecosystem comes a lack of appreciation for animal behaviour: we start to
think of animals as creatures whose only meaningful relationships are
with humans. That being done, we lose all sense of subtlety unless they
occupy a background role, like pack-mules and hunting dogs, our fantasy
animals are overwhelmingly portrayed in a way that skews heavily
towards one of two wildly differing extremes. Either we romanticize and anthropomorphize to an alarming degree (faithful, loyal and freakishly
sentient dogs or horses, near-magical wolves, noble and mystical stags),
or else we demonize, with the creation of wild animals who exist only
to menace humans (like ravenous wolves, child-eating lions, and
monstrous bears).
So with all this baggage surrounding the presence and portrayal of
animals in epic fantasy, what happens when we start building animalistic shape shifter societies in urban fantasy?
Nothing good, is the short answer. More specifically, we get the
Alpha Problem: endless tracts of sexism, misogyny, female
exceptionalism, rigid social hierarchies maintained through a
combination of violence and biological determinism, inescapable mating
bonds, and a carte blanche excuse for male characters to behave like
cavemen (and for female characters to accept it) on the slender
justification that, as alphas, it’s both in their nature and what’s
expected of them. And the thing is, I love urban fantasy, and I also
really love shapeshifters. But it’s not often these days that I get to
love the two things in combination, because apart from not being able to
deal with the sheer profligacy of the aforementioned problems, I also
can’t get past the fact that the logic on which they’re predicated – the
logic of wolves – is overwhelmingly inaccurate.
For ages now, werewolves have maintained their status as not only the
most widely-known, but easily most popular shapeshifters: as far as the
Western mythological and folkloric (and thus Western SFFnal) canon is
concerned, our concept of werewolves has set the standard for all
subsequent depictions of shapeshifters generally – and, not
unsurprisingly, our concept of werewolves has been historically
influenced by our view of
actual wolves. Though traditionally
portrayed as sly, ravening monsters who hunt to kill, as enshrined in
endless European stories from Little Red Riding Hood to Peter and the
Wolf, our perception of wolves – and consequently, of werewolves – has
changed drastically in the past few decades, undergoing something of a
360 degree reversal. Thanks in no small part to the
superficial affectations
of New Age spiritualism and its cherrypicking appropriation of various
Native American cultures, such as the concept of spirit animals, our
fantastic depictions of wolves began to change. Instead of being
described as slavering, child-stealing beasts, they were instead
ascribed a spiritual, near-magical status as guardians, wise warriors
and compassionate, social predators, which in turn had an impact on
werewolf stories. Instead of being little more than monsters in human
skin, more nuanced portrayals of werewolves emerged; first in narratives
which contrasted their sympathetic humanity with their unsympathetic
and uncontrolled bestial natures, and then, finally, in stories where
their animal side was shown as a to be a spiritual,
even desirable attribute.
Thus: once our general image of wolves had been rehabilitated to the
point where we could have positive, social werewolf stories rather than
deploying them purely as horror elements, it was only logical that
writers look to actual wolf behaviour for inspiration in writing
werewolf culture. And what they found was terminology that could easily
have been tailor-made for fantasists, with its Greek words and
implications of feudal hierarchy: the language of alpha, beta, gamma and
omega. The idea of an alpha mating pair lent itself handily to romance,
while the idea of wolves battling for supremacy within rigidly defined
family structures was practically a ready-made caste system. Writers
took to it with a vengeance – and as a consequence, we now find
ourselves in a situation where not only werewolves and other
shapeshifters, but purely human romantic pairings both within and
outside of fiction, are all discussed in the language of alpha and beta.
Under this system, alphas are hypermasculine, aggressive, protective
leaders, while betas are their more subdued, less assertive underlings.
The terminology has becomes so widespread, even beyond fantasy contexts,
that most people have probably heard of it; but in urban fantasy in
particular, the logic of wolves has long since become a tailor-made
justification for the inclusion and defense of alpha male characters.
These alphas, who frequently double as love interests, display violent,
controlling behaviour that would otherwise read as naked patriarchal
wish-fulfillment: instead, their animal aspect is meant to excuse and
normalise their aggression, on the grounds – often tacit, but always
implied – that real wolves act that way.
Except that, no: wolves
don’t act that way – and what’s more, we’ve
known
they haven’t for over a decade; even the alpha-beta terminology of
wolf relationships is falling out of scientific parlance due to its
inaccuracy. Which means that all the supposedly biologically-inspired
logic underpinning those endless alphahole characters and male-only
werewolf clans? That logic is
bullshit, and has been practically since it was written. So how, then, did it all get started in the first place? The answer is
surprisingly simple. Back in 1947, when wolf behaviour was very poorly understood, a man called Rudolph Schenkel published
a monorgaph on wolf interactions
based on his observations of what happened when totally unrelated
wolves from different zoos were all brought together in the same closed
environment – which is, of course, something that would never happen in
the wild, and which therefore produced aberrant behaviour. This paper
was subsequently cited heavily by wolf researcher L. David Mech in his
book
The Wolf: Ecology and Behaviour of an Endangered Species, which was first published in the 1970s. This being the first such book of its kind to be released for thirty-odd years,
The Wolf
became a massive success, was reprinted several times over the next two
decades, and subsequently became a primary reference for many other
researchers. But in the late 1990s, after studying wolves in the wild
firsthand, Mech came to realise that the alpha-beta system was
inaccurate; instead, wolves simply lived in family groups that formed in
much the same way human families do. He published his new results in
two papers in 1999 and 2000, and has been working since then to correct
the misinformation his first book helped to spread. But of course, the
trickle-down process is slow; though the new knowledge is accepted as
accurate, the old terminology is still sometimes used by researchers who
aren’t up to date.
So: given how long it’s taken the scientific community, Mech
included, to cotton on to the truth of wolves, I’m not about to blame
fantasy writers for having failed to know better, sooner. I will,
however, fault them for using the alpha-beta system as an excuse to
craft shapeshifter societies where female shifters are rare and special
for no good reason; where women are expected to both love and excuse the
aggressive behaviour of men; where punitive hierarchies are
aggressively enforced; and where controlling, coercive, stalkerish
actions are pardoned because It’s What Women Really Want. The decision
to focus on masculine power and to make such societies male-dominated as
a matter of biology was a conscious one, and while I’ve still enjoyed
some stories whose shapeshifters operate under such parameters, I’ve
always resented the parameters themselves. Off the top of my head, I can
think of at least five urban fantasy series where female shifters are
rare and male aggression rules their communities, but not a single one
where the reverse is true, let alone one that’s simply female-dominated.
And in a genre that’s renowned for its female protagonists and
ostensible female agenda, I dislike the extent to which many of those
women are made exceptional, not only by their lack of female associates,
friends and family members, but their success within traditionally
masculine environments as lone, acceptable women.
Though the truth of wolves wasn’t widely known when many such series
were first begun, it’s certainly known now. While there’s certainly
still room for a new interpretation of the alpha-beta system for
shapeshifters in a purely fictional sense – perhaps one with an actual
gender balance, or even (let’s go crazy) female dominance – I’m going to
tear my hair out if I see any more new stories where alpha males are
allowed to behave like terrible asshat jocks and never have their idiocy
questioned Because Magic Biology. Wolves and werewolves will always
have a special place in fantasy literature, but that doesn’t mean we
shouldn’t question our portrayals of their sentience – or that we can’t
reimagine their societies.
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