Author
Listed:
- Hannah Hunter
- Adam Searle
Abstract
How do technologies animate more-than-human geographies after extinction? How can geographical scholarship evoke, or bring presence to, extinct biota? In an epoch simultaneously characterized by biotic loss at an unthinkable scale and the increased presence of representations depicting nonhuman life through mass media and digitization, we examine the epistemic, affective, and ethical possibilities of extinct animal traces to shape more-than-human geographies. We show how technological apparatuses inaugurate afterlives of extinction troubling binaries of extinct–extant and absence–presence. Specifically, we consider audio and visual remains of two taxa producing awkward and unsettling postextinction geographies: the ivory-billed woodpecker and the bucardo. Sound recordings and other historical traces continue to forge contemporary connections between human searchers and the ivory-billed woodpecker, although no sighting of the ghost bird has been universally accepted since 1944. The bucardo was declared extinct in 2000, but it was tentatively reanimated through a failed 2003 cloning project; in this milieu, visual technologies and representations conjure alternative presence and speculative futures beyond technoscientific spectacle. Through conversing our own situated, speculative, and technologically mediated relations with these taxa—and situating the technological assemblages themselves—we present some of the lively, contested, and dispersed ways technological apparatuses affect and inaugurate animated geographies after extinction.
Suggested Citation
Hannah Hunter & Adam Searle, 2024.
"Postextinction Geographies: Audiovisual Afterlives of the Bucardo and the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker,"
Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 114(4), pages 770-791, April.
Handle:
RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:114:y:2024:i:4:p:770-791
DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2024.2304206
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