Encountering Extinction in Museums |
How museums display extinct species—and what these exhibits say about us.
While it’s no longer possible to encounter a dodo in the wild, we can still come face-to-face with them in museums. The remains of extinct species—whether taxidermied, skeletal, drawn, or sculpted—stare back at us from display cases.
In this moving meditation on what’s lost and what endures, environmental historian Dolly Jørgensen visits natural history collections worldwide—from Shanghai to Philadelphia, from Edinburgh to Hobart, Australia—to understand the many ways that museums tell stories about extinction. She encounters extinct animals that are framed as cultural artifacts and as rare valuables, that are memorialized with lists, and that are brought to life through augmented reality. She draws our attention to creatures with prominent afterlives—passenger pigeons, giant moas, thylacines—as well as those that are less likely to be discussed or displayed. Throughout, Jørgensen examines the relationship between museums and the natural world, so readers can look more closely at exhibits about extinction, studying the displays for what is there, as well as what is missing. During a period of rapid species loss driven by humanity’s environmental impact, Ghosts Behind Glass asks what we can learn about our world from the presence of the extinct.
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Praise for Ghosts Behind Glass |
“A timely exploration of lost animals all over the world in the era of the sixth Mass Extinction. This is a book for anyone who loves museums and their sacred spaces.”
–Libby Robin, author of What Birdo is That?: A Field Guide to Bird-people
"I found myself, in Jørgensen’s text, more excited inside the natural history museum than I had been in years. I finished the book in New York, and the next day I took myself to the American Museum of Natural History to hunt for ghosts.”
–Newcity
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