Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition by Antoine Traisnel is a thoughtful, poignant, and ethically driven study that characterizes a transformation in the cultural imagination of hunting, killing, and representing animals in the context of US expansion in the mid-late 19th century. Hunting practices shifted from subsistence hunting to spectacle sport to finally an environmental consciousness of preservation that Traisnel differentiates as “capture.” Traisnel examines this idea of capture as a hegemonic capitalist notion under a Foucauldian framework of biopolitics and White settler colonialism to eradicate indigenous peoples and animals because of land management programs that were given full life under the maxim Manifest Destiny. He argues that capturing animals to preserve them ultimately resulted in their exploitation and extinction. He states, “[It] worked to invisibilize and naturalize the violence visited on both animals and animalized human subjects—violence that contributed not only to the extinction...
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Book Review|
April 01 2023
Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition
Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition
. By Antoine Traisnel. (Minneapolis
: University of Minnesota Press
, 2020
. 353 pp. with black-and-white illustrations. Paper. $27.00. ISBN 978-1-5179-0964-2.)
Linda M. Johnson
Linda M. Johnson
Hancock Shaker Village
linda m. johnson, PhD, is the curator at Hancock Shaker Village, on the faculty as a lecturer II at the University of Michigan-Flint, and an adjunct professor in art history at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Books include Art, Ethics and the Human-Animal Relationship (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021). Research interests include Western art history, religion, and animal ethics. Email: [email protected]
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Journal of Animal Ethics (2023) 13 (1): 88–91.
Citation
Linda M. Johnson; Capture: American Pursuits and the Making of a New Animal Condition. Journal of Animal Ethics 1 April 2023; 13 (1): 88–91. doi: https://doi.org/10.5406/21601267.13.1.09
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