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SUMMARY; CHARSET=UTF-8 :"Trees as keys, ladders, maps: A revisionist history of early systematic trees" Petter HellstrÃ¶m (Uppsala University, Sweden)
UID:exeter_event_7637
URL:http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7637
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ATTACH: http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7637
DTSTAMP:20171215T125145
LOCATION:Byrne House
DESCRIPTION; CHARSET=UTF-8 :Egenis seminar series. 
In recent years, there has been a profusion of studies charting the history of tree diagrams in natural history and biological systematics. Whereas some of these have focused on one or a few arboreal schemes, the majority have presented long histories, spanning centuries and occasionally even millennia. Early or â€˜pre-Darwinianâ€™ trees typically feature in these histories as precursors to phylogenetics; sometimes even as the â€˜rootsâ€™ of later trees. Together with colleagues in France, I have previously argued that one of the most frequently cited early tree diagrams, Augustin Augierâ€™s â€˜Botanical Treeâ€™ (1801), cannot in any reasonable way be made to play the role of forerunner to later, evolutionary treesâ€”even as the author pitched his tree of natural families in explicitly genealogical terms. In this talk, I push the argument further by proposing an alternative reading of the historical record. Starting from Augierâ€™s tree and other early examples, I argue that â€˜pre-evolutionaryâ€™ trees should be understood less in terms of what came after, and more in terms of what came before. Attending to the functions they performed as keys, ladders, and maps, I argue that early trees were logical, rhetorical, and mnemonic devices drawn to imagine perfect, static order.http://www.exeter.ac.uk/events/details/?event=7637
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