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Hunting ghosts: on spectacles of spectrality and the trophy animal

Searle, Adam

Authors

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ADAM SEARLE ADAM.SEARLE@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Nottingham Research Fellow



Abstract

In lieu of material encounters, nonhuman spectres are made sense of through spectacles, imageries speculated upon with their own geographies and affects. This paper explores histories of trophy hunting in the Spanish Pyrenees, illustrating the emergence of the spectacular in relation to contemporary ideals of nature for hunters, in particular questioning the material implications of hunting for the extinction of the bucardo (or Pyrenean ibex). Theoretically, this paper converses Jacques Derrida’s metaphor of spectrality and Guy Debord’s conceptualisation of the spectacle to understand how hunting ghost animals removes them from particular ecological contexts. Trophy hunting and taxidermic practice serves to produce spectacles of animals at the interface of life and death, detaching them from temporal linearities, and allowing trophy animals to speak to broader sentiments of mastery over landscape. The bucardo was a ghostly figure prior to its extinction, famously difficult to encounter and kill by the 19th century, and as such its absence was marked through trophies to infer its broader presence in the landscape. I trace the changing significances of spectres and spectacles through the development of photographic technologies; prior to the camera’s spread and widespread use, spectral spectacles were produced through hunting practice. A typology is offered for the sensing of ghosts in their cultural contexts: mourning, or the attempt to ontologise remains; marking, or the conditional attribution of language to the spectral; and working, the means through which the ghost transforms itself or is transformed.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 1, 2020
Online Publication Date Jan 18, 2021
Publication Date 2021-07
Deposit Date Jul 15, 2023
Publicly Available Date Jul 17, 2023
Print ISSN 1474-4740
Electronic ISSN 1477-0881
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 28
Issue 3
Pages 513-530
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/1474474020987250
Keywords Environmental Science (miscellaneous); Cultural Studies; Geography, Planning and Development
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/23005058
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1474474020987250

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