"Dolly: a New Form of Transgenic Breedwealth"

Franklin, Sarah | from Multimedia Library Collection:
Environmental Values (journal)

Franklin, Sarah. “Dolly: a New Form of Transgenic Breedwealth.” Environmental Values 6, no. 4 (1997): 427–37. doi:10.3197/096327197776678997.

Public debate in Britain surrounding the cloning of Dolly the sheep has primarily focused on the legitimacy of cloning humans, not sheep. This bracketing of the human question relies on a distinction between humans and animals belied by the very constitution of transgenic animals who are made with human DNA, such as Dolly. Moreover, the ways in which human beings think about, manipulate and classify animals have distinct cultural consequences, for example in relation to cultural understandings of life, property, kinship and other forms of social interconnection. This article introduces the term ‘breedwealth’ to examine Dolly as a unique form of property in order to make some of these connections more visible.

— Article abstract from The White Horse Press website

Republished with permission. All rights reserved. © 1997 The White Horse Press