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Para-site-seeing: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

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Para-site-seeing: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science. / Southern, Jen; Dillon, Rod.
2021. Paper presented at Im|mobile lives in turbulent times.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Southern, J & Dillon, R 2021, 'Para-site-seeing: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science.', Paper presented at Im|mobile lives in turbulent times, 8/07/21 - 9/07/21.

APA

Southern, J., & Dillon, R. (2021). Para-site-seeing: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science.. Paper presented at Im|mobile lives in turbulent times.

Vancouver

Southern J, Dillon R. Para-site-seeing: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science.. 2021. Paper presented at Im|mobile lives in turbulent times.

Author

Bibtex

@conference{0e0fb67f18a942c5a64ee04cd7467fe8,
title = "Para-site-seeing:: Working with deadly mobilities in art and science.",
abstract = "Para-site-seeing is an art-science collaboration by the authors that uses the deadly Leishmania parasite as a guide to multispecies travel. The art work was initially a travel-blogging portal narrated from the parasites perspective, and then became Para-Site-Seeing: Departure Lounge in which the same narratives were embedded into an airport installation. This paper discusses the global mobilities of Leishmania, and the ethical considerations of anthropomorphising a deadly parasite in a multi-species travel narrative. The parasites mobility ranges from micro-movements through the sand fly gut, to historical and global migrations within the bodies of humans and other mammals, and travel between labs as elite research colonies. Through the work we generated playful narratives from the parasite{\textquoteright}s perspective, but we also produced a problem. How could it be ethical to make work that anthropomorphises a deadly human parasite? Is it possible to proceed with care for both the parasite and the humans it affects? We suggest that by layering complex stories in an accessible way we canexplore the multiplicity involved in producing the scientific work. Through caring both for and about the mobilities of Leishmania the work revealed the parasite in all its contaminated diversity, at large in the world as well as the laboratory. By thinking through art, mobilities and scientific research together, we can approach deadliness with care.",
author = "Jen Southern and Rod Dillon",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "8",
language = "English",
note = "Im|mobile lives in turbulent times : Methods and Practices of Mobilities Research ; Conference date: 08-07-2021 Through 09-07-2021",
url = "https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/news-events/events/2021/07/mobilities-symposium-2021/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Para-site-seeing:

T2 - Im|mobile lives in turbulent times

AU - Southern, Jen

AU - Dillon, Rod

PY - 2021/7/8

Y1 - 2021/7/8

N2 - Para-site-seeing is an art-science collaboration by the authors that uses the deadly Leishmania parasite as a guide to multispecies travel. The art work was initially a travel-blogging portal narrated from the parasites perspective, and then became Para-Site-Seeing: Departure Lounge in which the same narratives were embedded into an airport installation. This paper discusses the global mobilities of Leishmania, and the ethical considerations of anthropomorphising a deadly parasite in a multi-species travel narrative. The parasites mobility ranges from micro-movements through the sand fly gut, to historical and global migrations within the bodies of humans and other mammals, and travel between labs as elite research colonies. Through the work we generated playful narratives from the parasite’s perspective, but we also produced a problem. How could it be ethical to make work that anthropomorphises a deadly human parasite? Is it possible to proceed with care for both the parasite and the humans it affects? We suggest that by layering complex stories in an accessible way we canexplore the multiplicity involved in producing the scientific work. Through caring both for and about the mobilities of Leishmania the work revealed the parasite in all its contaminated diversity, at large in the world as well as the laboratory. By thinking through art, mobilities and scientific research together, we can approach deadliness with care.

AB - Para-site-seeing is an art-science collaboration by the authors that uses the deadly Leishmania parasite as a guide to multispecies travel. The art work was initially a travel-blogging portal narrated from the parasites perspective, and then became Para-Site-Seeing: Departure Lounge in which the same narratives were embedded into an airport installation. This paper discusses the global mobilities of Leishmania, and the ethical considerations of anthropomorphising a deadly parasite in a multi-species travel narrative. The parasites mobility ranges from micro-movements through the sand fly gut, to historical and global migrations within the bodies of humans and other mammals, and travel between labs as elite research colonies. Through the work we generated playful narratives from the parasite’s perspective, but we also produced a problem. How could it be ethical to make work that anthropomorphises a deadly human parasite? Is it possible to proceed with care for both the parasite and the humans it affects? We suggest that by layering complex stories in an accessible way we canexplore the multiplicity involved in producing the scientific work. Through caring both for and about the mobilities of Leishmania the work revealed the parasite in all its contaminated diversity, at large in the world as well as the laboratory. By thinking through art, mobilities and scientific research together, we can approach deadliness with care.

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 8 July 2021 through 9 July 2021

ER -