Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning

My article examines the ways in which animal bodies have been transformed into objects charged with powerful affective forces, arranging the discussion under the themes of memory, desire and mourning. Hunting trophies, taxidermic mounts and domestic objects made from preserved dismembered parts, all...

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Main Author: Julia Courtney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2018-12-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/4192
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author Julia Courtney
author_facet Julia Courtney
author_sort Julia Courtney
collection DOAJ
description My article examines the ways in which animal bodies have been transformed into objects charged with powerful affective forces, arranging the discussion under the themes of memory, desire and mourning. Hunting trophies, taxidermic mounts and domestic objects made from preserved dismembered parts, allowed retired colonial ‘Nimrods’ and intrepid ‘Dianas’ to relive the vivid experiences of big game hunting. At the same time disembodied claws, teeth and horns carried an erotic charge when transformed into lovers’ gifts, while the sensuous reaction to animal skins can be seen in contemporary art and fiction. Thirdly, mourning for departed pets or celebrity animals, in an age when death and remembrance were significant cultural forces, might involve the preservation of either a whole animal or isolated body parts, as in the case of larger creatures such as horses. Drawing on contemporary journalism, fiction and descriptions of the objects themselves, I examine topics including the irony of ‘naturalisation’, the synecdoche of dismembered parts, and the power of objects to focus emotions. While the death of the animal is implicit in the construction of the domestic object, possession of the object allows the owner to recapture, even to re-experience, intensely lived moments of danger, violence, comradeship, physical prowess, closeness to nature and, especially, of power.
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language English
publishDate 2018-12-01
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
record_format Article
series Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
spelling doaj-art-dc792c62dbc34dfba3135bdd5c1f84ba2025-01-30T10:22:06ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492018-12-018810.4000/cve.4192Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and MourningJulia CourtneyMy article examines the ways in which animal bodies have been transformed into objects charged with powerful affective forces, arranging the discussion under the themes of memory, desire and mourning. Hunting trophies, taxidermic mounts and domestic objects made from preserved dismembered parts, allowed retired colonial ‘Nimrods’ and intrepid ‘Dianas’ to relive the vivid experiences of big game hunting. At the same time disembodied claws, teeth and horns carried an erotic charge when transformed into lovers’ gifts, while the sensuous reaction to animal skins can be seen in contemporary art and fiction. Thirdly, mourning for departed pets or celebrity animals, in an age when death and remembrance were significant cultural forces, might involve the preservation of either a whole animal or isolated body parts, as in the case of larger creatures such as horses. Drawing on contemporary journalism, fiction and descriptions of the objects themselves, I examine topics including the irony of ‘naturalisation’, the synecdoche of dismembered parts, and the power of objects to focus emotions. While the death of the animal is implicit in the construction of the domestic object, possession of the object allows the owner to recapture, even to re-experience, intensely lived moments of danger, violence, comradeship, physical prowess, closeness to nature and, especially, of power.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/4192taxidermysouvenirshuntingWard (Rowland)furscelebrity animals
spellingShingle Julia Courtney
Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
taxidermy
souvenirs
hunting
Ward (Rowland)
furs
celebrity animals
title Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
title_full Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
title_fullStr Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
title_full_unstemmed Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
title_short Animal Objects: Memory, Desire and Mourning
title_sort animal objects memory desire and mourning
topic taxidermy
souvenirs
hunting
Ward (Rowland)
furs
celebrity animals
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/4192
work_keys_str_mv AT juliacourtney animalobjectsmemorydesireandmourning