Abstract
Drawing on archival research conducted at the Royal Society, London by _______an artist and accidental historian of Science, this paper will explore the borders and boundaries in the fluid domains of fieldwork photography and expeditionary science research stations. Through the story of Angela Bishop, the wife of an expedition leader to Central Brazil in the 1960s, this paper examines the borders between wild and domestic, public and private, institutional and autobiographical in the Royal Society Iain Bishop expedition photographic collection.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1. Smith, Mato Grosso, 49. Print.
2. Simon and Ryan, New Spaces of Exploration.
3. Chodorow, The Reproduction of Mothering. Print
4. Kohler, “History of Field Sciences,” 216. Print.
5. Yusoff, “Configuring the Field,” 52–77.
6. See note 4 above.
7. Schteir, “Botany in the Breakfast Room,” 31–43. Web.
8. Griffiths, “The Untrammeled Camera,” 95–109. Print.
9. Yusoff, “Configuring the Field,” 65.
10. Rose and Blunt, Writing Women and Space, 4. Print.
11. Ibid.
12. Royal Society Archive, item EXP 6/5/1/7.
13. Yusoff, “The inhumanities,” 663–76.
14. Wexler, Tender Violence.
15. Wolfe, Animal Rites, 6.
16. Fudge, Pets, 8.
17. Berger, “Why Look at Animals,” 26.
18. Davies, “Introduction to Regional Animalities,” 8.
19. Smith, At the Edge of Sight, 76.
20. Batchen, “Origins without End,” 72.
21. Sanders Pierce, “Logic as Semiotic,”107–08. Web.
22. Elkin, “Foreword,” 20–23.