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 Introduction 
 Mediated Nature 
 Sponsor Trap 
 Generation of Extinction 
 Archival Environment 
 Credits 
 About the Artists 
Phagamys orthodonMus musculus muralis
 Hypnomys morpheus
 Hypnomys mahonensis
 Thyrrhenicola hanceni
 Pitymys bavaricus
 Mammothus primigenius
 Equus hemionus anatoliensis
 Equus ferus silverstris
 Prolagus sardus
 Prolagus corcianus
 Nesiotites similis
 Nesiotites corsicanus
 Panthera tigris virgaes
 Panthera pardus tulliana
 Panthera leo europaea
 Felis lynx sardiniae
 Sinotherium sardus
 Canis lupus minor
 Canis lupus deiesnus
 Hippopoesmus sp.nov
 Mecodema punctellum
 Candibrervus ropalophorus
 Candibrervus rethymnensis
 Myotragus balearicus
 Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica
 Capra pyrenaica lusiesnica
 Anthicus antiochensis
 Aplothorax bunrchelli
 Atelothrus transiens
 Blackburnia insignis
 Chaetotrechiana kiuchii
 Disenochus micantipennis
 Ishikawatrechus intermedius
 Rangifer esrandus
 
 |     The Sponsor Trap 
Marketing significantly affects representations of the natural world. 
In an era when most learn about the wild from television rather than from direct 
observation, the mass media's allegiance to advertising threatens all creatures 
that do not contribute to industrial consumption.  As habitats deteriorate, accuracy
in reporting becomes less and less entertaining.  A few photogenic endangered species continue
to be of some value in the calculus of public relations, but the light of sponsorship shines
far more brightly on the escapist terrain of special effects, soft porn, gaming, and sports.
 
A parallel and related failure of representation permeates global trade agreements that barely respect human 
rights and leave other species to hang in the wind.   Corporations eager to fast track the 
appropriation of dwindling natural resources continue to craft laws 
behind closed doors, while environmentalists are excluded from discussions by cyclone
fences and legions of cops.  
With the intensification of global marketing, the consequences of obscurity loom large over the voiceless,
both human and otherwise.  In the economy of attention, every visible surface
has a market value, and images of products tend to eclipse and supplant glimpses of flora and fauna. 
This fierce competition for attention overtakes natural selection, and elevates consumption above conservation. 
With attention trained on the daily spectacle, the disappearance of species proceeds apace.  Hardly noticed.  
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