“It is true that animals are usually not able to participate in their liberation, but they behave differently when they are liberated and have better living conditions.”
— Speaking Beyond Language: Lin May Saeed Interviewed

The Lives of Animals │BOOKS

Franz Kafka, A Report to an Academy, 1917
Book

“A Report to an Academy”  is a short story by Franz Kafka, published in 1917. In the story, an ape named Red Peter, who has learned to behave like a human, presents to an academy the story of how he effected his transformation. 

In J.M. Coetzee's novel The Lives of Animals, Elizabeth Costello, the title character, gives a central place to A Report to an Academy  in her speech about vegetarianism and animal rights. She also suggests that Kafka may have been influenced by German psychologist Wolfgang Köhler's The Mentality of Apes, also published in 1917. 

“Red Peter was not an investigator of primate behavior but a branded, marked, wounded animal presenting himself as speaking testimony to a gathering of scholars. I am not a philosopher of mind but an animal exhibiting yet not exhibiting, to a gathering of scholars, a wound, which I cover up under my clothes but touch on in every word I speak." J.M. Coetzee, The Lives of Animals