This article deals with the kind of knowledge historically imposed upon the wilderness of the New World, with the threat that nonverbal reality poses for the human mind, and with the taxonomic fever that took over Natural Science in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. I will look at these issues through two texts which cover the expedition of John James Audubon to Labrador (Canada) in the summer of 1833: one of them is a biographical document, Audubon and His Journals (1897), the other is a fictional work, the novel Creation (2002) written by Katherine Govier. I will draw from Audubon’s Journals and from Govier’s novel in order to discuss why Labrador was envisaged by both artists as challenging the ingrained human duty to draw lines a...
This is the publisher's version also available electronically from http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index...
The tensions between city and country, the artificial and the natural, the real and the fake are at ...
This article examines the subversion of traditional human approaches to nature in Jeff VanderMeer’s ...
This article highlights some of the works of the legendary work of John James Audubon, drawn from th...
Seemingly, science and literature don't have anything in common. Actually, fields such as medicine a...
For many thousands of years, the rainforests of British Columbia's North Coast have been home to imm...
This article is concerned with the relationship between British colonization and the intellectual un...
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT: Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were crea...
Long before Charles Darwin\u27s time, members of Western civilization viewed the sciences and spirit...
It is a pleasure to offer my talk today in this land of mammalian eccentricity. I will discuss conti...
When we think about American ornithology, John James Audubon is often the first name that comes to m...
En ligne à l'adresse suivante : http://jsse.revues.org/index821.htmlInternational audienceThe articl...
Nature's History identifies a series of episodes in the history of American landscape representation...
The conditions of hunting and gathering through which one line of primates evolved into humans form ...
Covering 500 years in 500 pages, Paradise Found details the amazing abundance of the natural world t...
This is the publisher's version also available electronically from http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index...
The tensions between city and country, the artificial and the natural, the real and the fake are at ...
This article examines the subversion of traditional human approaches to nature in Jeff VanderMeer’s ...
This article highlights some of the works of the legendary work of John James Audubon, drawn from th...
Seemingly, science and literature don't have anything in common. Actually, fields such as medicine a...
For many thousands of years, the rainforests of British Columbia's North Coast have been home to imm...
This article is concerned with the relationship between British colonization and the intellectual un...
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT: Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were crea...
Long before Charles Darwin\u27s time, members of Western civilization viewed the sciences and spirit...
It is a pleasure to offer my talk today in this land of mammalian eccentricity. I will discuss conti...
When we think about American ornithology, John James Audubon is often the first name that comes to m...
En ligne à l'adresse suivante : http://jsse.revues.org/index821.htmlInternational audienceThe articl...
Nature's History identifies a series of episodes in the history of American landscape representation...
The conditions of hunting and gathering through which one line of primates evolved into humans form ...
Covering 500 years in 500 pages, Paradise Found details the amazing abundance of the natural world t...
This is the publisher's version also available electronically from http://ojs.ethnobiology.org/index...
The tensions between city and country, the artificial and the natural, the real and the fake are at ...
This article examines the subversion of traditional human approaches to nature in Jeff VanderMeer’s ...