Lyn Miles
H. Lyn Miles (born August 5, 1944) is an American bio-cultural anthropologist and animal rights advocate. Miles is known for a 1970s experiment in which a baby orangutan named Chantek was videotaped during sign language acquisition. She was teaching sign language providing a full human experience in the immersive-participant-observation way, the same way human babies are taught during infancy. LifeMiles was raised by her brother and has two other non-biological brothers.[1] In 1978, she earned her PhD in anthropology from the University of Connecticut.[2] Since 1993, she has lived in Atlanta, Georgia in order to be able to visit Chantek after he was transferred to the Yerkes National Primate Research Center and was sharing the responsibility for Chantek with her colleague Ann Southcombe who for seven years kept visiting Chantek. WorkOn the Chattanooga university campus, Miles had equipped a trailer home for Chantek, who had a full human experience during the experiment. She is currently a UC Foundation Professor of Anthropology at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, teaching courses that include physical anthropology, ape language, and linguistic anthropology. She is a Fellow of the American Anthropological Association and an Editorial Associate of Behavioral and Brain Sciences. AdvocacyMiles advocates that no enculturated great apes should be treated as captive experimental animals, but as true "orang utans", which means "persons of the forest", and eventually be declared as legal persons under the law.[1] She is a strong supporter of orangutan conservation.[2] Media coverageMiles and her work has been the subject of several documentaries.
Selected publications
References
|