Inventing a Beast with No Body: Radio-Telemetry, the Marginalization of Animals, and the Simulation of Ecology

Radio-telemetry is a relatively new technology that is having powerful impacts on the way wildlife is studied. With tens of thousands of new radio-telemetry units produced each year, to be placed on animals in the wild, it is a technology that is becoming increasingly pervasive. This paper begins by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology Culture, and Ecology, 2005, Vol.9 (2), p.255-270
1. Verfasser: Bergman, Charles
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description Radio-telemetry is a relatively new technology that is having powerful impacts on the way wildlife is studied. With tens of thousands of new radio-telemetry units produced each year, to be placed on animals in the wild, it is a technology that is becoming increasingly pervasive. This paper begins by examining the way radiotelemetry has been adapted for the study of macaws in Latin America. The paper argues that as a form of surveillance and monitoring, radio-telemetry illustrates some ways in which Michel Foucaul's concepts of "biopower" and surveillance can be applied to the management of wildlife. Additionally, as the new technology creates a greater sense of distance between the "sign" of a creature and its actual reality, wild animals seem to become what Jean Baudrillard terms "simulations", in which they are increasingly signs of their own disappearance—both as creatures and as species.
doi_str_mv 10.1163/1568535054615349
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ispartof Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology, 2005, Vol.9 (2), p.255-270
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source Alma/SFX Local Collection; JSTOR
subjects Animals
BIOPOWER
Bird nesting
ENDANGERED SPECIES
FOUCAULT
Parrots
Radio transmitters
RADIO-TELEMETRY
Surveillance
Wild animals
Wildlife
Wildlife conservation
Wildlife management
Wildlife studies
WILDLIFE SURVEILLANCE
title Inventing a Beast with No Body: Radio-Telemetry, the Marginalization of Animals, and the Simulation of Ecology
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