Breeding Ignorance Continues


  • Photographer
    Mary Shannon Johnstone
  • Prize
    Honorable Mention
  • Company/Studios
    Shannon Johnstone
  • Date of Photograph
    2009
  • Technical Info
    Archival Inkjet Prints

These photographs call attention to the tragic epidemic of animal overpopulation, and illuminate what happens when we don’t spay and neuter our cats and dogs.

Story

*OVERVIEW
With this work I explore the tragedy of the massive overpopulation of cats and dogs in my community. In North Carolina, the state in which I live, every year over 250,000 dogs and cats have to be euthanized because there is no place to put them. That is almost 700 every day, which I find shocking and heartbreaking. Although heroic efforts are made daily by animal control officers, shelter employees, veterinarians, and volunteers, they are faced with a Sysiphisan task. These photographs explore the animals and aftermath of this epidemic, focusing on what remains when there are no regulations on breeding, spaying or neutering.

*THE IMPETUS
After adopting two dogs, I wondered why dogs are “purchased” at all, and began volunteering at a state-owned animal control facility. I was stunned to learn they receive over 8,000 animals annually, but can only hold 275 animals at a time. This results in thousands of euthanasias at this facility alone. Equally stunning, I learned many potential owners oppose the 100% sterilization policy. When asked about this, the most frequent response is sterilization is inhumane and/or unnatural. There is also objection to abortion of pet pregnancies. After months of volunteering and listening, I decided to respond photographically.

*PROCESS
On my first visit to photograph the euthanasias, the lead veterinarian pulled me aside saying she had one rule—if I needed to cry, I had to leave the building. She explained the need for professionalism, and that crying was not allowed. Alternatively she offered, “You leave here, then you cry, and you love the animals you have. That is what I do. That is what we all do.” Another vet offered, “The tragedy is not that we euthanize animals. The tragedy is that we HAVE to euthanize. There is no alternative.” With this in mind, I decided the project should focus on the animals and the aftermath—but not the workers, whose identities I purposefully blocked. I hope these photographs call attention to the tragic epidemic of animal overpopulation, and illuminate what happens when we don’t spay and neuter our cats and dogs.

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