On Sharks Unseen

Sadie Hale
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Abstract

Basking sharks are the planet’s second-largest fish, and in the summer they feed on plankton in the Sea of the Hebrides, in Scotland. Once hunted for the oil contained in their livers, basking sharks are now a protected species, with tour companies offering the possibility to see and even snorkel with them. There is no guarantee of a sighting, however. This essay takes as its point of departure one such unsuccessful attempt to find basking sharks, undertaken as part of a research trip to learn about the history of shark hunting in the north-east Atlantic. Engaging with literature from multispecies ethnography, the essay considers the implications of treating absences as a condition of research on underwater species. It asks what form the tenets of multispecies ethnography – such as arts of attentiveness, immersion, and sustained participation in the lives of others – can take in oceanic settings. It suggests that direct observation cannot always account for relations with the unseen, and that methodologically and conceptually, the non-encounter offers a way of thinking through the ways that human activity can contribute to the loss of other species.
关于看不见的鲨鱼
姥鲨是地球上第二大鱼类,夏季在苏格兰赫布里底群岛海域以浮游生物为食。姥鲨曾因其肝脏中含有的石油而被猎杀,现在已成为受保护的物种,旅游公司提供观赏甚至浮潜姥鲨的机会。不过,并不能保证一定能看到它们。这篇文章以一次寻找姥鲨的失败尝试为出发点,作为了解东北大西洋捕鲨历史的研究之旅的一部分。文章结合多物种人种学文献,探讨了将缺席作为水下物种研究条件的意义。文章询问了多物种民族志的原则--如专注、沉浸和持续参与他人生活的艺术--在海洋环境中可以采取什么形式。它表明,直接观察并不总能解释与看不见的事物之间的关系,而在方法论和概念上,非接触提供了一种思考方式,即人类活动可能导致其他物种消失的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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