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Visual culture in eighteenth-century natural history. Botanical illustrations and expeditions in the Spanish Atlantic.

机译:视觉文化在18世纪的自然历史中。西班牙大西洋的植物插图和探险队。

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摘要

This dissertation investigates the visual culture of natural history in the eighteenth century and its connection to European colonialism. In the second half of the century, Spain sponsored almost thirty scientific expeditions to its colonies, eight of which focused specifically on natural history. The almost 10,000 images produced by the Spanish expeditions, far from being mere ornamental byproducts of natural history investigation, were central to the project. Expeditions constituted visualization projects that enabled naturalists to identify, translate, transport, and appropriate nature.;Natural history, I argue, was an overwhelmingly visual discipline whose notion of sight went beyond the physiological act of seeing to involve acts of expert viewing that required training and specialized practices of observation and representation—not sight, but insight. This visual culture of science was very much a material one linking vision to images, drawn or engraved, and to specimens in collections. Furthermore, the act of viewing nature was inextricably linked to colonialism, as visual culture allowed Europeans to identify, translate, transport, and appropriate foreign natures. The visual culture of nature can not be divorced from its colonial exploitation. More than mere representations, images acted as visual avatars replacing objects that did not survive travel and would otherwise remain unseen and unknown by Europeans. Images defined nature as a series of transportable objects whose identity and importance was divorced from the environment where they grew or the culture of its inhabitants. Pictures were used to reject the local as contingent, subjective, and translatable, favoring instead the dislocated global as objective, truthful, and permanent. In the Spanish Americas, however, hybrid scientific and artistic traditions emerged, presenting alternatives that contested and reappropriated nature from this European uniforming vision.;The dissertation discusses, among other topics, the status and uses of images in eighteenth-century natural history; the importance of visual material in training the expert eyes and skilled hands of naturalists, artists, and collectors; the role of print culture in establishing a common vocabulary of scientific illustration, and the ways in which colonial naturalists and artists appropriated and transformed European models, producing hybrid, local representations.
机译:本文研究了十八世纪自然历史的视觉文化及其与欧洲殖民主义的联系。在本世纪下半叶,西班牙赞助了将近30场科学探险之旅,其中有8场专门针对自然历史。西班牙远征队制作的近10,000张图像,绝不仅仅是自然历史调查的装饰性副产品,而是该项目的核心。远征构成了可视化项目,使博物学家能够识别,翻译,运输和适当的性质。我认为自然历史是一门压倒性的视觉学科,其视觉概念超出了生理性的观察行为,涉及了需要培训的专家观察行为以及观察和表示的专业实践-不是视觉而是观察力。这种视觉的科学文化非常重要,是将视觉与绘画或雕刻的图像以及收藏的标本联系起来的一种物质。此外,观看自然的行为与殖民主义有着千丝万缕的联系,因为视觉文化使欧洲人能够识别,翻译,运输和适当的外来自然。自然的视觉文化不能脱离其殖民剥削。图像不仅是表示形式,还充当视觉化身,代替了无法在旅行中幸存的物体,否则将被欧洲人看不见和未知。图像将自然定义为一系列可运输的物体,其身份和重要性与它们生长的环境或其居民的文化背道而驰。图片被用来拒绝当地的偶然性,主观性和可翻译性,取而代之的是将错位的整体视为客观,真实和永久的。然而,在西班牙美洲,混合的科学和艺术传统应运而生,提出了从欧洲统一视野中挑战和重新夺回自然的替代方法。本文主要讨论图像在18世纪自然历史中的地位和用途。视觉材料在训练博物学家,艺术家和收藏家的专业眼睛和熟练手方面的重要性;印刷文化在建立科学插图的通用词汇表中的作用,以及殖民地博物学家和艺术家采用和改造欧洲模式的方式,从而产生了混合的,本地的代表。

著录项

  • 作者

    Bleichmar, Daniela.;

  • 作者单位

    Princeton University.;

  • 授予单位 Princeton University.;
  • 学科 History Latin American.;History of Science.;Art History.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2005
  • 页码 318 p.
  • 总页数 318
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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