Speculative Taxidermy
68RECONFIGURING ANIMAL SKINS FIGURE 1.4 Snæbjörnsdóttir/Wilson, the naming of things. Video still from the in- stallation betwe ...
RECONFIGURING ANIMAL SKINS69 Their work between you and me comprises six short films, each pre- senting different ontological r ...
70RECONFIGURING ANIMAL SKINS At this point, the naming of things, as a title, encapsulates the complici- ties and inescapably r ...
One finds in the programme of the Panopticon a similar concern with observation, with characterization and classification, with ...
72A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON epistemic strategies as the quintessential discipline through which “the real-register of nature ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON73 which narratives have been woven around things that exist or are ob- served, are important repre ...
74A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON abstracted icon, the Platonic idea, to a material level that is closer to the animal and further ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON75 FIGURE 2.1 Mark Fairnington, The Parrot Plant, 2009. Oil on panel. 70 × 40 cm. antihistorical do ...
76A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON the objectifying tendency of natural history illustration is subverted by a different speculativ ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON77 TRANSCRIBING ANIMALS: LIMITING AND FILTERING In The Order of Things, Foucault noted that natural ...
78A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON well as metaphorically, immobilizing the object of knowledge, whether it be animals or plants. T ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON79 Eden.^18 Both Foucault’s and Lévi-Strauss’s theorizations ultimately relate to the visibility of ...
80A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON The epistemic uniqueness of the Middle Ages lies in the pervasiveness of the logos of God.^24 Th ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON81 peculiar epistemological spatialization in which animal semantics not only substantially define ...
82A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON archaeologist and historian John R. Allen, “a tiger is described as a kind of serpent, and is ac ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON83 the manual reproduction of bestiaries around Europe, the newly ac- quired visibility of animals ...
84A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON epistemic parameters, Gesner’s work also demonstrated new awareness of the importance images cou ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON85 and the East Indies.^40 These new animal bodies appeared somewhat sus- pended between the empiri ...
86A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON those formal traits that could be empirically recorded, such as body shape and color. The repres ...
A NATURAL HISTORY PANOPTICON87 natural history treaties. The shared reliance on the traced line rendered animal bodies more “wo ...
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