Anthropomorphism - Genius or stupid?
One
recalls, in the Indian education system, memories of having to endure English
as taught in the British schooling system for 12 years before properly learning
it from subtitles to American films and TV. In course of the education, many
concepts imprisoned on paper by Messrs Wren and Martin subconsciously entered
our brains. Let’s analyse one such concept: anthropomorphism, i.e. the tendency
of writers to assign human traits to non-human characters or things.
To
be brutally honest, it comes across as absolutely ridiculous. If anything, the
world as we know it is going in the opposite direction. We expect our cricketers
to be run machines, our politicians to be truth machines and our domestic help
to be, well, machines. In fact, we are actively working towards the
mechanization of the human species by becoming expectation machines ourselves
and making our children robots. In other words, with our increasing interaction
with technology, we can safely be accused of becoming increasingly
inconsiderate towards fellow humans over the years.
The
inconsiderateness index of humans shot up massively when a suit at Disney
decided that toys needed to have feelings for him to make money. That has led
to a domino effect where we are being told that everything from video game
characters and emojis to feelings themselves are conscious. We used to live in
a period where children used toys as nothing but projectiles and the
‘unbreakable’ label on them as a challenge. The days are not far when you would
be burdened by the moral implications of crashing a Hot Wheels car into a pile
of other cars, sending them flying. As a former connoisseur of Hot Wheels
crashes, the author can attest to the fact that watching shiny bits of metal
and plastic be thrown around the room would be remarkably less fun if one had
to debate later on whether one’s car felt like it was a gladiator enslaved to
do one’s bidding, and possibly perish in the process.
It’s
not just limited to toys as well. The first non-humans to get voices and traits
were animals. Having studied the Warner Brothers, imagine my surprise when the
guy at the zoo I first went to told me that ducks and rabbits do not, in fact,
spend their whole days scheming against each other. Over time, I am convinced
that anthropomorphism is just a plot device created by artists who cannot, or
will not, animate human characters for the enjoyment of the audiences.
This
is not to say that this cruel concept is limited only to toys. The largest victims
of tacked-on human traits are pets. If the internet is to be believed (indeed a
topic of great debate in itself in the present day), millennials would rather care
for a pet than a human child. This is not only against conventional logic in that
a human child has a better chance of developing human traits than dogs or cats,
it has also led to the invasion of the internet by puppies and kittens being
subjected to events in human lives. It
isn’t funny when you put tiny spectacles on a cat and post it to social media,
and the cat isn’t thinking “Oh I hate this so much I’m going to knock over
something as revenge for this humiliation” when you do it. It’s a cat. The extent
of its thought is probably where its next meal is coming from. My point is, a
human as an animal is the most advanced and all that but there is no need to
mock those with less intellect than (some of) our species. It is time, then, to
call a spade a spade and just leave it at that.
I
am willing to concede that it is okay to form an emotional connect with some
objects. It is okay, for example, to have a lucky pen. It is okay to have a
food item of preference in stressful situations. It is okay to apologize to
your motorcycle after hitting pothole after pothole on your way back from work.
It’s a motorcycle, all it will say after you hit a pothole is ‘pssh’ from its
shock absorbers and continue to ferry your body around. It might think of you
as a pillock for a minute for subjecting it to torture, but nothing a good
service won’t fix. Motorcycles are reliable buddies, and I make it a point to
check on mine as often as I can. Like us, they have needs of food and clothing
as well. In fact, I call mine Chetak after the Maharana’s legendary horse, and I
just got him new shoes in time for the upcoming monsoons.
From hot wheels to looney toons, toy story to chetak! This was a fun read!
ReplyDeleteA great read. Thoughts well woven into the story, which is fun to read.
ReplyDelete