One year during my childhood, an exhibit opened at the Philadelphia Zoo that
drew a lot of media attention. The exhibit contained a man, whom would go about
the daily activities of that species: grooming and dressing in the morning,
situating itself in a place of work and taking up the affordances of its office
habitat, partaking of a meal, preparing for sleep at night, all for the
edification and education of the patrons who would gaze upon this strange representative
creature among the many other animals on display. At once, this spectacle
spoke both Foucault's discovery of man as a uniquely modern object of study (Order and Things),
and fully realized Mitchell's portrayal of the objectifying gaze of the
European (Colonising Egypt): where the late 20th century zoo would put man on exhibit,
as an object in itself, the late 19th century put Egyptian and
Indian on display as representative in the same manner that ostrich and
elephant were seen to be.
Where Foucault traces a two-step transition that brings modernity to a
disclosure of man as object of science, Mitchell provides an experiential basis
for this transition: in the changing instrumentality of glass. Prior to the
moment of interest to Mitchell, glass would have served largely either in a
protective or utilitarian role: admitting light (natural or stained) to a
building while keeping at bay other elements; facilitating the arrangement of
garments or the finer tasks of grooming; shielding from grime while opening to
examination (as for a clock face); or extending the reach or detail of vision.
Yet, we see glass put to new uses in the mirrored cafe and wholesaler's
warehouse (where rather than aiding in the fastening of a garment or use of a
razor, here glass is deployed to extend space) and in the store displays (where
instead of merely protecting items on display or helping one to see at a
distance, glass now fixes the viewer before them—in the way a clock face never
did—even as it encloses and walls off the viewed). It is notable that this is
the same period that the technology of microscopes are significantly improved
(Ernst Abbe, 1882), which unlike telescopes, require that the object of
observation be arranged on a surface (also glass) for viewing, and the first
consumer-priced camera (Kodak, 1888) came on the market (the camera, too,
requiring in its production of an image a careful arrangement and momentary
fixing of its subject and of the photographer both, in a way that neither the
bearer of field telescope or even the painter with their easel had experienced
previously).
At the same time as glass now demanded an arrangement and fixing of both its
subject and its gaze, so in this new relation to glass, a new spatiality is
marked out. Glass now multiplies space, or more importantly for us, encloses
it: for where the glass face of a grandfather clock unobtrusively kept dust
from its hands, the glass display of the shop, or the glass lens of the now
widely-available camera, bounded even as it arranged, in a way previously not
common to the public view. Indeed, it is during this very period that we are
given the ultimate marriage of an extensive space bounded behind glass, as
experienced through Alice (1871).
Thus, our Egyptians in the closing decades of the 19th century are
gazed upon by their European contemporaries, as if specimens under glass, but
it is only a matter of time, as Foucault describes in his second movement of
modernity--fully embodied in glass only during the early decades of the 20th century--that the
gaze would be turned upon the gazer, and as in that exhibit at the Philadelphia
Zoo, man (rather than men-from-Egypt) becomes the object of study.
[An
interesting side note: during the same decade that the Philadelphia Zoo held
its exhibit of man, another event occurred at the same zoo that evokes the
interplay of representation and objectification, and in particular, signifier
and signified. One morning, those living in the greater Philadelphia area woke
to the news that, during the night, a graffiti artist had broken into the zoo
and tagged an elephant. Here, the representation of a distant land became a
surface upon which a personal sign (the signature tag) was presented, even as
it stood for a subject that refused the status of object, leaving his public
mark clandestinely, himself absent from the public gaze.]

Your blog is terrific!
ReplyDeleteHere is the url to the blog from the archives of the Sandusky Library, if you would like to take a look:
http://sanduskyhistory.blogspot.com