T. rex is Fierce, T. rex is Charismatic, T. rex is Litigious: Disruptive Objects in Affective Desirescapes

IF 0.6 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Donna Yates, Emily Peacock
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In this paper we present T. rex fossils as disruptive objects that can drastically influence the actions and reactions of humans that encounter them. We present a vision of the T. rex as being a key node within a web of human and object associations that ultimately produces, first, extreme desire in humans, and then a breakdown in human relationships resulting in disagreements, disputes, lawsuits, and the committing of crime. From there we bring these T. rex fossils into the concept of desirescape which sees a network of object/object and object/human reactions provoking irresistible desire in humans. We argue that this desire can push humans to violate law or social norms or, in several T. rex cases, sue each other. How then should we humans approach T. rex and other disruptive objects? Cautiously, and with the knowledge that these objects may be more powerful than we are.
霸王龙很凶猛,霸王龙很有魅力,霸王龙很好讼:情感欲望景观中的干扰物
在本文中,我们将霸王龙化石视为一种具有破坏性的物品,能够极大地影响遇到它们的人类的行为和反应。我们认为霸王龙是人与物品关联网络中的一个关键节点,它首先会使人类产生极度的欲望,然后破坏人际关系,导致分歧、纠纷、诉讼和犯罪。由此,我们将这些霸王龙化石引入 "欲望景观"(desirescape)的概念中,认为物与物、物与人之间的反应网络会激起人类不可抗拒的欲望。我们认为,这种欲望会促使人类违反法律或社会规范,或者在一些霸王龙的案例中,迫使人类相互起诉。那么,我们人类应该如何对待霸王龙和其他具有破坏性的物体呢?谨慎行事,并且要知道这些物体可能比我们更强大。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Cultural Property
International Journal of Cultural Property HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
13
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