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Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition
Contributor(s): Traisnel, Antoine (Author)
ISBN: 1517909635     ISBN-13: 9781517909635
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
OUR PRICE:   $106.92  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: September 2020
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Modern - 19th Century
- Literary Criticism | American - General
Dewey: 813.309
LCCN: 2020022352
Physical Information: 256 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Reading canonical works of the nineteenth century through the modern transformation of human-animal relations

From Audubon's still-life watercolors to Muybridge's trip-wire locomotion studies, from Melville's epic chases to Poe's detective hunts, the nineteenth century witnessed a surge of artistic, literary, and scientific treatments that sought to "capture" the truth of animals at the historical moment when animals were receding from everyday view. In Capture, Antoine Traisnel reveals how the drive to contain and record disappearing animals was a central feature and organizing pursuit of the nineteenth-century U.S. cultural canon.

Capture offers a critical genealogy of the dominant representation of animals as elusive, precarious, and endangered that came to circulate widely in the nineteenth century. Traisnel argues that "capture" is deeply continuous with the projects of white settler colonialism and the biocapitalist management of nonhuman and human populations, demonstrating that the desire to capture animals in representation responded to and normalized the systemic disappearance of animals effected by unprecedented changes in the land, the rise of mass slaughter, and the new awareness of species extinction. Tracking the prototyping of biopolitical governance and capitalist modes of control, Traisnel theorizes capture as a regime of vision by which animals came to be seen, over the course of the nineteenth century, as at once unknowable and yet understood in advance--a frame by which we continue to encounter animals today.