Thinking with traces : A posthumanist reading of human and nonhuman agencies in Zhu Yingchun’s The Language of Bugs
Bister, S. (2024). Thinking with traces : A posthumanist reading of human and nonhuman agencies in Zhu Yingchun’s The Language of Bugs. Trace, 10, 136-159. https://doi.org/10.23984/fjhas.136668
Published in
TraceAuthors
Date
2024Copyright
© 2024 The Authors.
The Language of Bugs by Zhu Yingchun (2018) is an art book wavering between the linguistic and the bodily, visual arts and literature. Consisting of thousands of traces left on paper by real-life insects and their bodily movements, it does not contain any text traditionally readable for humans, but claims to be a book written entirely in the language of insects. The traces indicate nonhuman agency for the insects and present writing and literature as subjects of nonhuman actions and messy interspecies collaboration. At the same time, the book rises questions on insect “language” and the possibility of ethical representation originating from a very human point-of-experience. In this article, I reflectively explore different crossings of human and nonhuman agencies in The Language of Bugs, as well as how the book engages with questions of representation and materiality, writing and literature in the framework of posthumanist reading. I analyse the book as participating in the attempt to notice more-than-human ways of being in literature and culture, which are traditionally only perceived through human agency. The context of my reading is threat posed by ecological crises and especially the decline in insect populations for the future of the planet. I argue that Zhu Yingchun’s book represents a wider shift in thinking about the natural world and humans’ place in it. Ultimately, the book articulates one very basic question: can literature widen to include traces of nonhuman movements?
...
Publisher
Finnish Society for Human-Animal StudiesISSN Search the Publication Forum
2343-0591Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/212362887
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related funder(s)
Kone FoundationLicense
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Foraging Bumblebees Selectively Attend to Other Types of Bees Based on Their Reward-Predictive Value
Romero-González, Jose E.; Royka, Amanda L.; MaBouDi, HaDi; Solvi, Cwyn; Seppänen, Janne-Tuomas; Loukola, Olli J. (MDPI, 2020)Using social information can be an efficient strategy for learning in a new environment while reducing the risks associated with trial-and-error learning. Whereas social information from conspecifics has long been assumed ... -
Developing response-ability in human-wasp encounters
Santaoja, Minna; Torniainen, Jyrki; Komonen, Atte (The Finnish Society for Human-Animal Studies, 2023)Learning to live with unloved others is crucial in the ecological crisis. Unloved wasps are feared and disliked for their sting. Understanding of their ecological importance is increasing, however. Human-wasp encounters ... -
Finnish Bookstagrammers’ Perceptions of Learning English through Literature and Participating in the Bookstagram Community
Lieska, Amalia (2022)Kirjallisuudella on historian saatossa ollut erilaisia funktioita kielenoppimisessa, ja sen merkitys tunnistetaan yhä. Perinteisesti kirjallisuuden avulla on opetettu muun muassa kielioppia ja sanastoa, mutta nykytutkimus ... -
Text, language & literature of fictional worlds : analysis of the language of Skyrim and roleplaying video games
Virta, Mikko (2024)Kielentutkimus videopeleissä on usein keskittynyt pelien positiiviseen rooliin kielten oppimisessa. Kun peleistä on tullut suurempia ja kunnianhimoisempia, monet niistä ovat kehittyneet fiktiivisiksi maailmoiksi, ja tämä ... -
Kuinka koira puhutaan kasvisruokailijaksi? : diskurssianalyyttinen avaus monilajiseen elämäntyylipolitiikkaan
Malila, Ville (Alue- ja ympäristötutkimuksen seura ry, 2024)Social sciences have shed light on various aspects of vegetarianism and veganism but overlooked the feeding of non-human animals. I use discourse analysis and interview data to investigate how vegan dog ...