Natural history museums have been the natural place to find remnants of extinction, but extinction can also be hidden in cultural artefacts. This article identifies certain possibilities and challenges in telling extinction stories through cultural artefacts. Principally, they can reveal different anthropogenic connections to lost biodiversity and challenge our perceptions of extinction and how to restore relationships with what is lost. I illustrate this through the Hawaiian ‘ahu‘ula (cloaks or capes) that were made from feathers of endemic forest birds now extinct or threatened on the islands. By approaching the ‘ahu‘ula as a biocultural artefact, this article points to new ways of telling stories of extinction beyond natural history muse...
This paper considers issues in de-extinction using art historical and museological perspectives. It...
We live in an era marked by an accelerating rate of species death, but since the early days of the d...
The Kauai O\u27o, a bird believed extinct since 1964, was located deep in Hawaii\u27s Alakai Swamp b...
Natural history museums have been the natural place to find remnants of extinction, but extinction c...
The extinction of Hawaiian birds has been of interest to many archaeologists and paleontologists. Th...
Whether stuffed remains in a museum case, inscribed tombstone, or stone wall perched on a cliff, mem...
Feather capes and cloaks of the ali`i communicate the history of the Hawaiian people through their p...
Abstract The Hawaiian Islands were once home to one of the most diverse assemblages of terr...
Increasing exploitation and commodification of the world’s species and natural systems threaten biol...
In recent years the presentation of anthropogenic extinction narratives in natural history museums h...
This paper examines the role of nostalgia in practices of remembering the Huia, an extinct bird ende...
The thesis is focused on the illustration of feather artefacts from some of the Pacific Islands that...
In recent years the presentation of anthropogenic extinction narratives in natural history museums h...
Extinction challenges our thinking and writing. Such overwhelming disappearance of ways of being, ex...
Human settlement into new regions is typically accompanied by waves of animal extinctions, yet we ha...
This paper considers issues in de-extinction using art historical and museological perspectives. It...
We live in an era marked by an accelerating rate of species death, but since the early days of the d...
The Kauai O\u27o, a bird believed extinct since 1964, was located deep in Hawaii\u27s Alakai Swamp b...
Natural history museums have been the natural place to find remnants of extinction, but extinction c...
The extinction of Hawaiian birds has been of interest to many archaeologists and paleontologists. Th...
Whether stuffed remains in a museum case, inscribed tombstone, or stone wall perched on a cliff, mem...
Feather capes and cloaks of the ali`i communicate the history of the Hawaiian people through their p...
Abstract The Hawaiian Islands were once home to one of the most diverse assemblages of terr...
Increasing exploitation and commodification of the world’s species and natural systems threaten biol...
In recent years the presentation of anthropogenic extinction narratives in natural history museums h...
This paper examines the role of nostalgia in practices of remembering the Huia, an extinct bird ende...
The thesis is focused on the illustration of feather artefacts from some of the Pacific Islands that...
In recent years the presentation of anthropogenic extinction narratives in natural history museums h...
Extinction challenges our thinking and writing. Such overwhelming disappearance of ways of being, ex...
Human settlement into new regions is typically accompanied by waves of animal extinctions, yet we ha...
This paper considers issues in de-extinction using art historical and museological perspectives. It...
We live in an era marked by an accelerating rate of species death, but since the early days of the d...
The Kauai O\u27o, a bird believed extinct since 1964, was located deep in Hawaii\u27s Alakai Swamp b...