Description

Book Synopsis

The sixth mass extinction or Anthropocene extinction is one of the most pervasive issues of our time. Animals, Plants and Afterimages brings together leading scholars in the humanities and life sciences to explore how extinct species are represented in art and visual culture, with a special emphasis on museums. Engaging with celebrated cases of vanished species such as the quagga and the thylacine as well as less well-known examples of animals and plants, these essays explore how representations of recent and ancient extinctions help advance scientific understanding and speak to contemporary ecological and environmental concerns.



Trade Review

Animals, Plants and Afterimages draws together an impressive range of essays that describe, contemplate, explore, and challenge the relationships between extinction and representation, engaging with a series of perceptual, conceptual, material, and illusory afterimages of animals and plants with whom we can no longer co-exist but who still matter to us.” • Rick De Vos, Curtin University

“The editors’ approach to extinctions through museum exhibitions, technologies and works of art is highly illuminating. Next time, when I visit a natural history museum, I will see the exhibition and the dead animals and plants in a different light.” • Markku Oksanen, University of Eastern Finland



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
List of illustrations, Figures and Tables

Introduction: Representing Extinction: Art, Science and Afterimages
Valérie Bienvenue and Nicholas Chare

Part I: Dialogues about Extinction

Chapter 1. The Dinosaur as Cultural Symbol and Totem: W.J.T. Mitchell in Conversation
W.J.T. Mitchell

Chapter 2. Visualizing Extinction: Harriet Ritvo in Conversation
Harriet Ritvo

Chapter 3. ‘Putting Nature Back Together Again’: Stuart Pimm in Conversation
Stuart Pimm

Part II: Indigenous Peoples and Extinction

Chapter 4. The Beothuk, the Great Auk and the Newfoundland Wolf: Animal and Human Genocide in Canada’s Easternmost Province
Nicholas Chare

Chapter 5. Cultural Memory of Recent Extinctions: A Chinese Perspective
Samuel T. Turvey

Chapter 6. Grief, Extinction, and Bilhaa (Abalone)
hagwil hayetsk (Charles R. Menzies)

Part III: Representing Avian and Insect Extinctions

Chapter 7. Sparrows with teeth and claws? Reconstructing the Cretaceous Enantiornithes (Aves: Ornithothoraces)
Jingmai O’Connor

Chapter 8. Rare Birds and Rare Books The Species as Work of Art
Gordon M. Sayre

Chapter 9. The Virtual Realities of Species Revivalism: Restoring the Kaua‘i ‘Ō‘ō Bird in Jakob Kudsk Steensen's Re-Animated
Sarah Bezan

Chapter 10. Insects, Spiders, Snails and Empathy: Representing Invertebrate Extinctions in Natural History Museums
Pedro Cardoso

Part IV: Representing Extinct Plants and Fungi

Chapter 11. Reconstructing Lycopsids Lost to the Deep Past
Jeffrey P. Benca

Chapter 12. Ellis Rowan, Extinction and the Politics of Flower Painting
Jeanette Hoorn

Chapter 13. Towards Extinction: Mapping the Vulnerable, Threatened and Critically Endangered Plant in ‘Moments of Friction’
Dawn Sanders

Chapter 14. Sweetness, Power, Yeasts, and Entomo-terroir
Robert R. Dunn, Monica C. Sanchez and Matthew Morse Booker

Part V: Representing Extinct Mammals

Chapter 15. Animal Extinction, Film and the Death Drive
Barbara Creed

Chapter 16. Tasmanian Tiger: Precious Little Remains
David Maynard

Chapter 17. From the General to the Particular: Piecing together the Life and Afterlife of A544, Louis XVI’s Quagga
Valérie Bienvenue

Part VI: Exhibiting Extinction

Chapter 18. Three Variations on the Theme of Extinction: Looking Anew at the Art and Science of Mark Dion
Anne-Sophie Miclo

Chapter 19. The Exhibition of Extinct Species: A Critique
Norman MacLeod

Chapter 20. Exhibiting Extinction: Thylacines in Museum Display
Kathryn Medlock

Afterword: After Extinction
Valérie Bienvenue and Nicholas Chare

Contributors
Index

Animals, Plants and Afterimages: The Art and

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A Hardback by Valérie Bienvenue, Nicholas Chare

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    View other formats and editions of Animals, Plants and Afterimages: The Art and by Valérie Bienvenue

    Publisher: Berghahn Books
    Publication Date: 11/03/2022
    ISBN13: 9781800734258, 978-1800734258
    ISBN10: 1800734255

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The sixth mass extinction or Anthropocene extinction is one of the most pervasive issues of our time. Animals, Plants and Afterimages brings together leading scholars in the humanities and life sciences to explore how extinct species are represented in art and visual culture, with a special emphasis on museums. Engaging with celebrated cases of vanished species such as the quagga and the thylacine as well as less well-known examples of animals and plants, these essays explore how representations of recent and ancient extinctions help advance scientific understanding and speak to contemporary ecological and environmental concerns.



    Trade Review

    Animals, Plants and Afterimages draws together an impressive range of essays that describe, contemplate, explore, and challenge the relationships between extinction and representation, engaging with a series of perceptual, conceptual, material, and illusory afterimages of animals and plants with whom we can no longer co-exist but who still matter to us.” • Rick De Vos, Curtin University

    “The editors’ approach to extinctions through museum exhibitions, technologies and works of art is highly illuminating. Next time, when I visit a natural history museum, I will see the exhibition and the dead animals and plants in a different light.” • Markku Oksanen, University of Eastern Finland



    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements
    List of illustrations, Figures and Tables

    Introduction: Representing Extinction: Art, Science and Afterimages
    Valérie Bienvenue and Nicholas Chare

    Part I: Dialogues about Extinction

    Chapter 1. The Dinosaur as Cultural Symbol and Totem: W.J.T. Mitchell in Conversation
    W.J.T. Mitchell

    Chapter 2. Visualizing Extinction: Harriet Ritvo in Conversation
    Harriet Ritvo

    Chapter 3. ‘Putting Nature Back Together Again’: Stuart Pimm in Conversation
    Stuart Pimm

    Part II: Indigenous Peoples and Extinction

    Chapter 4. The Beothuk, the Great Auk and the Newfoundland Wolf: Animal and Human Genocide in Canada’s Easternmost Province
    Nicholas Chare

    Chapter 5. Cultural Memory of Recent Extinctions: A Chinese Perspective
    Samuel T. Turvey

    Chapter 6. Grief, Extinction, and Bilhaa (Abalone)
    hagwil hayetsk (Charles R. Menzies)

    Part III: Representing Avian and Insect Extinctions

    Chapter 7. Sparrows with teeth and claws? Reconstructing the Cretaceous Enantiornithes (Aves: Ornithothoraces)
    Jingmai O’Connor

    Chapter 8. Rare Birds and Rare Books The Species as Work of Art
    Gordon M. Sayre

    Chapter 9. The Virtual Realities of Species Revivalism: Restoring the Kaua‘i ‘Ō‘ō Bird in Jakob Kudsk Steensen's Re-Animated
    Sarah Bezan

    Chapter 10. Insects, Spiders, Snails and Empathy: Representing Invertebrate Extinctions in Natural History Museums
    Pedro Cardoso

    Part IV: Representing Extinct Plants and Fungi

    Chapter 11. Reconstructing Lycopsids Lost to the Deep Past
    Jeffrey P. Benca

    Chapter 12. Ellis Rowan, Extinction and the Politics of Flower Painting
    Jeanette Hoorn

    Chapter 13. Towards Extinction: Mapping the Vulnerable, Threatened and Critically Endangered Plant in ‘Moments of Friction’
    Dawn Sanders

    Chapter 14. Sweetness, Power, Yeasts, and Entomo-terroir
    Robert R. Dunn, Monica C. Sanchez and Matthew Morse Booker

    Part V: Representing Extinct Mammals

    Chapter 15. Animal Extinction, Film and the Death Drive
    Barbara Creed

    Chapter 16. Tasmanian Tiger: Precious Little Remains
    David Maynard

    Chapter 17. From the General to the Particular: Piecing together the Life and Afterlife of A544, Louis XVI’s Quagga
    Valérie Bienvenue

    Part VI: Exhibiting Extinction

    Chapter 18. Three Variations on the Theme of Extinction: Looking Anew at the Art and Science of Mark Dion
    Anne-Sophie Miclo

    Chapter 19. The Exhibition of Extinct Species: A Critique
    Norman MacLeod

    Chapter 20. Exhibiting Extinction: Thylacines in Museum Display
    Kathryn Medlock

    Afterword: After Extinction
    Valérie Bienvenue and Nicholas Chare

    Contributors
    Index

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