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Executing species

animal attractions in Thomas Edison and Douglas Gordon

Anat Pick

pp. 311-320

Cinema has never been human. The central place of animals in the emergence and development of the cinematic medium is by now well established.1 Yet, if there has been a recent "animal turn" in film studies, it has focused less on animals themselves than on how animals are symbolically produced in representation. Animals remain cinema's "elephant in the room": the medium's unacknowledged presence but also its potential for seeing the world, and animals, differently. As Jonathan Burt has consistently argued, screen animals exceed their symbolic value as representation and are located on the threshold between the figurative and the metaphorical. Despite their excessive use as mirrors of human concerns and as repositories of human attributes, the appearance of animals in moving images is always also concrete, and affects us as such.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137430328_31

Full citation:

Pick, A. (2015)., Executing species: animal attractions in Thomas Edison and Douglas Gordon, in M. Hauskeller, T. D. Philbeck & C. D. Carbonell (eds.), The Palgrave handbook of posthumanism in film and television, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 311-320.

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