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Self-cannibalism

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Self-cannibalism is the practice of eating oneself, also called autocannibalism,[1] or autosarcophagy.[2] A similar term which is applied differently is autophagy, which specifically denotes the normal process of self-degradation by cells. Whilst almost an exclusive term for this process, autophagy nonetheless has occasionally made its way into more common usage.[3]

Contents

[edit] Self-cannibalism among humans

[edit] As a natural occurrence

A certain amount of self-cannibalism occurs unwittingly, as the body consumes dead cells from the tongue and cheeks. Ingesting one's own blood from an unintentional lesion such as a nose-bleed or an ulcer is clearly not intentional harvesting and consequently not considered cannibalistic.

Catabolisis is also sometimes described as "self-cannibalism."[citation needed]

[edit] As a disorder or symptom thereof

Fingernail-biting that develops into fingernail-eating is a form of pica. Other forms of pica include the compulsion of eating one's own hair (also trichophagia and Desirae syndrome), which can form a hairball (trichobezoar) in the stomach.

[edit] As a choice

Some people will engage in self-cannibalism as an extreme form of body modification, for example eating their own skin.[4] Others will drink their own blood, a practice called autovampirism,[5] but sucking blood from wounds is generally not seen to be cannibalism. Placentophagy may be a form of self-cannibalism. On January 13, 2007, Chilean artist Marco Evaristti hosted a dinner party for his most intimate friends. The main meal was agnolotti pasta, which was topped with a meatball made from the artist's own fat, removed in the previous year in a liposuction operation.[6]

[edit] As a crime

Forced self-cannibalism as a form of torture or war crime is not uncommon. Erzsébet Báthory forced some of her servants to eat their own flesh.[7] In the 16th Century, Spanish colonizers forced natives to eat their own testicles.[8] Incidents were reported in the years following the 1991 coup in Haiti.[9] In the 1990s young people in Sudan were forced to eat their own ears.[10]

One famous case of self-cannibalism is the Armin Meiwes trial. One of the persons involved, Bernd Jürgen Armando Brandes, had wanted his penis to be amputated, after Armin Meiwes amputated, they attempted to eat it together but found that it was too tough.

[edit] Self-cannibalism among animals

The short-tailed cricket is known to eat its own wings.[11] There is evidence of certain animals digesting their own nervous tissue when they transition to a new phase of life. The sea squirt (with a tadpole-like shape) contains a ganglion 'brain' in its head, which it digests after attaching itself to a rock and becoming stationary, forming an anemone-like organism. This has been used as evidence that the purpose of brain and nervous tissue is primarily to produce movement. Self-cannibalism behavior has been documented in North American rat snakes: one captive individual twice attempted to consume itself, dying in the second attempt. Another wild rat snake individual was found having swallowed about two-thirds of its body.[12]

[edit] Cultural references

The ancient symbol Ouroboros depicts a serpent biting its own tail.
  • King Erysichthon from Greek mythology ate himself in insatiable hunger, given him, as a punishment, by Demeter.
  • Stephen King's short story "Survivor Type", about a man trapped on a small island.
  • Ryan, Alan (1984) "The Bones Wizard", Whispers.
  • Roger, Frank, "The Implosion of a Gastrocrat: an Experiment in Autophagy".
  • In the manga One Piece the character Zeff eats his own foot while marooned on an island after a storm that destroyed his ship. However in the anime version he just cut off his leg with an anchor during the storm to save himself and Sanji from drowning.
  • In the novel Hannibal, Hannibal Lecter recalls psychologically manipulating a Mason Verger into eating his own nose and feeding his face to his dog. In the course of the novel Lecter also feeds part of a man's brain to that man.
  • In issue #5 of the Marvel Comic Livewires, Stem Cell ate most of her own skin so that she could use it as base material for constructing her Pyronano "babies". Afterwards, she considered adopting "Autocannibal" as her name.
  • In the original book The Queen of the Damned, the twin sisters Maharet and Mekare are punished for refusing to help Akasha. Mekare's tongue is cut out and Maharet's eyes are removed. Both women then ingest the parts.
  • Rammstein's song "Mein Teil" is about Armin Meiwes (see above) and his victim, who supposedly shared a meal made out of the victim's genitals.
  • Autopsy's song "Severed Survival" is about resorting to self-cannibalism after being stranded on a barren island.
  • In the computer game Zork, the command "eat self" returns the message "Autocannibalism is not the answer".
  • In the film Spaceballs, one character named Pizza the Hutt (a parody of Jabba the Hutt) is revealed to have eaten himself to death while locked in his car with no other food sources.
  • The short story "The Savage Mouth" by Japanese science fiction writer Sakyo Komatsu deals with self-cannibalism.
  • In the Simpson episode "Treehouse Of Horror XV", in the opening sequence, space alien Kang complains that Homer is eating himself while they were cooking him.
  • In the Itchy and Scratchy episode, Esophagus Now, Itchy serves Scratchy his own stomach at a restaurant.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Man-eaters: The Evidence for Coastal Tupi Cannibalism" mei(sh) dot org
  2. ^ National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) PubMed
  3. ^ Benecke, Mark "First report of non-psychotic self-cannibalism (autophagy), tongue splicing and scar patterns (scarification) as an extreme form of cultural body modification in a Western civilization"
  4. ^ See Benecke above.
  5. ^ NCBI PubMed
  6. ^ Artist Cooks meal in own Body Fat, January 13, 2007
  7. ^ Adams, Cecil "Did Dracula really exist?" The Straight Dope'
  8. ^ Miguel A. De La Torre, "Beyond Machismo: A Cuban Case Study" (citing Diana Iznaga, "Introduction" to Fernando Ortiz, Los negros curros (La Habana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1986) xviii-xix.)
  9. ^ Chin, Pat. "Behind the Rockwood case" Workers World, April 6, 1996
  10. ^ Lambeth Daily News 6 August 1998
  11. ^ Taber, Stephen Welton (2005) Invertebrates Of Central Texas Wetlands, page 200.
  12. ^ Mattison, Chris (2007). The New Encyclopedia of Snakes. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 105. ISBN 0-691-13295-X. 
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