Displaying Death and Animating Life
Human-Animal Relations in Art, Science, and Everyday Life
Displaying Death and Animating Life
Human-Animal Relations in Art, Science, and Everyday Life
Desmond, a pioneer in the field of animal studies, builds the book on a number of case studies. She conducts research on-site at major museums, taxidermy conventions, pet cemeteries, and even at a professional conference for writers of obituaries. She goes behind the scenes at zoos, wildlife clinics, and meetings of pet cemetery professionals. We journey with her as she meets Kanzi, the bonobo artist, and a host of other animal-artists—all of whom are preparing their artwork for auction. Throughout, Desmond moves from a consideration of the visual display of unindividuated animals, to mourning for known animals, and finally to the marketing of artwork by individual animals. The first book in the new Animal Lives series, Displaying Death and Animating Life is a landmark study, bridging disciplines and reaching across divisions from the humanities and social sciences to chart new territories of investigation.
312 pages | 26 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2016
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Biological Sciences: Behavioral Biology
Cognitive Science: Human and Animal Cognition
Psychology: Animal Behavior
Sociology: Occupations, Professions, Work
Reviews
Table of Contents
1 Introduction: Passionate Encounters with Animals in Everyday Life—Beyond the Mainstream
Part One Theaters of the Dead: Humans and Nonhuman Animals
2 Postmortem Exhibitions: Taxidermied Animals and Plastinated Corpses in the Theaters of the Dead
3 Inside “Animal” and Outside “Culture”: The Limits to “Sameness” and Rhetorics of Salvation in von Hagens’s Animal Inside Out Body Worlds Exhibition
Part Two Mourning and the Unmourned
4 On the Margins of Death: Pet Cemeteries and Mourning Practices
5 Grievable Lives and New Kinships: Pet Cemeteries and the Changing Geographies of Death
6 Animal Deaths and the Written Record of History: The Inflammatory Politics of Pet Obituaries in Newspapers
7 Requiem for Roadkill: Death, Denial, and Mourning on America’s Roads
Part Three Animating Life: Cognition, Expressivity, and the Art Market
8 “Art” by Animals, Part 1: The Transnational Market for Art by (Nonprimate) Animals
9 “Art” by Animals, Part 2: When the Artist Is an Ape—Popular and Scientific Discourse and Paintings by Primates
10 Conclusion: “Every Bird a ‘Blueboy’” and Why It Matters for “Animal Studies”
Notes
Index
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