The Authentic Animal
Inside the Odd and Obsessive World of Taxidermy
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- €10.99
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- €10.99
Publisher Description
Why would someone want to create or own the mounted skin of a dead animal? That's the question Dave Madden explores in The Authentic Animal. Madden starts his journey with the life story of Carl Akeley, the father of modern taxidermy. Akeley started small by stuffing a canary, but by the end of his life he had created the astonishing Akeley Hall of African Mammals at The American Museum of Natural History. What Akeley strove for and what fascinates Madden is the attempt by the taxidermist to replicate the authentic animal, looking as though it's still alive. To get a first-hand glimpse at this world, Madden travels to the World Taxidermy Championships, the garage workplaces of people who mount freeze-dried pets for bereaved owners, and the classrooms of a taxidermy academy where students stretch deer pelts over foam bases. On his travels, he looks at the many forms taxidermy takes—hunting trophies, museum dioramas, roadside novelties, pet memorials—and considers what taxidermy has to tell us about human-animal relationships. The Authentic Animal is an entertaining and thought-provoking blend of history, biology, and philosophy that will make readers think twice the next time they scoff at a moose head hung lovingly on a wall.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Don't let the gory subject matter repel you from this charming account of the cast of kings, artists, biologists, circus performers, and ordinary folks who populate the world of taxidermy. Madden's investigation is marked by appealing candor, literary references, and atmospheric descriptions of (and fondness for) the subculture and its adherents. Much of the book's drama comes from its story of the life of Carl Akeley, "the founder of modern taxidermy," a writer's dream of a subject with his idiosyncrasies, contradictions, and hair-raising stories of strangling a leopard with his bare hands. Deftly interweaving gripping tales and vivid depictions of the diorama-lined convention centers and air-conditioned "Man-Caves" of modern taxidermy, this book muses with verve and wit on the relationships between human and animal, art and artifact, as well as on the collector's obsession.