Dogs


Kij Johnson: The evolution of trickster stories among the dogs of North Park after the ChangeThe evolution of trickster stories among the dogs of North Park after the Change

Short fiction by Kij Johnson. Excerpt:

6. One Dog Invents Death.

This is the same dog. She lives in a nice house with people. They do not let her run outside a fence and they did things to her so that she can’t have puppies, but they feed her well and are kind, and they rub places on her back that she can’t reach.

At this time, there is no death for dogs, they live forever. After a while, One Dog becomes bored with her fence and her food and even the people’s pats. But she can’t convince the people to allow her outside the fence.

“There should be death,” she decides. “Then there will be no need for boredom.”

- Kij Johnson: Link.

Via Futurismic.

Interesting idea, nicely realized. The story is a finalist for the 2007 Nebula Award — best wishes Kij!

Reminiscent of The Author of the Acacia Seeds
And Other Extracts from the Journal of the Association of Therolinguistics
by Ursula LeGuin, as well as Our Neural Chernobyl by Bruce Sterling.



My brother the archaeologist sent me these comments about his work:

Dog burials have come up in our work in Kazakhstan on Botai culture sites. The Botai lived in pit houses whose door opened to the southwest. Botai Dog BurialOutside the door, they would bury two sacrificed dogs, presumably as symbolic or supernatural guardians. If you look in the attached image showing a magnetic map of Botai houses, you will see pairs of small magnetic highs to the southwest of the larger (but weaker) square pit-houses. These have not been tested, but it is imagined that these pairs of anomalies may be dog sacrifices.

The Botai culture, by the way, are candidates for having been the earliest horse domesticators, and also (more speculatively) proto Indo-Europeans.

See also:

  • Ritual Dog Burials @ USA Today
  • Dog @ Wikipedia
  • Burial @ Wikipedia
  • Community Organisation Among Copper Age Sedentary Horse Pastoralists Of Kazakhstan — Sandra Olsen, Bruce Bradley, David Maki And Alan Outram — Pending