In the introduction to Loss: The Politics of Mourning, David Eng and David Kazanijan write that ‘as soon as the question “What is lost?” is posed, it invariably slips into the question “What remains?” That is, loss is inseparable from what remains, for what is lost is known only by what remains of it, by how these remains are produced, read, and sustained’ (2). This article considers the remains of the thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, the last of which died on 7 September 1936 at Beaumaris Zoological Gardens on the Hobart Domain. Since its untimely demise the thylacine has been an enduring presence in the cultural life of Tasmania and has become an international emblem of extinction. This article contemplates the power of thylacine remains to...
The Anthropocene presents significant environmental problems for both humans and nonhumans alike, as...
In this essay I explore how two divergent examples of the nonfiction moving image can be understood ...
When Tasmania was settled by the British 200 years ago, the thylacine, a shy marsupial carnivore wit...
In the introduction to Loss: The Politics of Mourning, David Eng and David Kazanijan write that ‘as ...
The ability to make images allows humans to construct ideas about and positions for animals that ca...
What role do museums play in elevating the Sixth Mass Extinction Event within public consciousness? ...
This thesis explores the folk resurrection of the thylacine through artwork and symbolic interaction...
The thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus), with a recent distribution throughout A...
The thylacine was a shy and elusive nonhuman animal who survived in small numbers on the island of T...
“The world tells a big story: living arrangements that took millions of years to put into place are ...
This chapter examines the Beaumaris zoo in Hobart, Tasmania, through the award-winning Australian 20...
Aim: The Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, is an infamous example of a recent human-mediated extinction...
The last captive thylacine died in the Hobart Zoo in 1936 (Paddle 2000). Beyond this historical fact...
Whether stuffed remains in a museum case, inscribed tombstone, or stone wall perched on a cliff, mem...
The Tasmanian Tiger or thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus) continues to stalk the Tasmanian imaginat...
The Anthropocene presents significant environmental problems for both humans and nonhumans alike, as...
In this essay I explore how two divergent examples of the nonfiction moving image can be understood ...
When Tasmania was settled by the British 200 years ago, the thylacine, a shy marsupial carnivore wit...
In the introduction to Loss: The Politics of Mourning, David Eng and David Kazanijan write that ‘as ...
The ability to make images allows humans to construct ideas about and positions for animals that ca...
What role do museums play in elevating the Sixth Mass Extinction Event within public consciousness? ...
This thesis explores the folk resurrection of the thylacine through artwork and symbolic interaction...
The thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus), with a recent distribution throughout A...
The thylacine was a shy and elusive nonhuman animal who survived in small numbers on the island of T...
“The world tells a big story: living arrangements that took millions of years to put into place are ...
This chapter examines the Beaumaris zoo in Hobart, Tasmania, through the award-winning Australian 20...
Aim: The Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, is an infamous example of a recent human-mediated extinction...
The last captive thylacine died in the Hobart Zoo in 1936 (Paddle 2000). Beyond this historical fact...
Whether stuffed remains in a museum case, inscribed tombstone, or stone wall perched on a cliff, mem...
The Tasmanian Tiger or thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus) continues to stalk the Tasmanian imaginat...
The Anthropocene presents significant environmental problems for both humans and nonhumans alike, as...
In this essay I explore how two divergent examples of the nonfiction moving image can be understood ...
When Tasmania was settled by the British 200 years ago, the thylacine, a shy marsupial carnivore wit...