The simulacrum of a dead hare lays on the ground, out of scale, out of place.“Invariably, other beings are measured... Read More
The simulacrum of a dead hare lays on the ground, out of scale, out of place.
“Invariably, other beings are measured by human scale, but in this instance, it is in excess of this. Does this imply that the hare looks back at the human realm in ways that diminish the human ability to look back with measure?
Perhaps it touches upon the anxiety of a future that is excessive, exaggerated, or displaced.
The writer Maurice Blanchot says that the disaster has already happened. Is this then the anxiety related to such a possibility? The excessive, exaggerated, and displaced is already in our midst, looking back at us. It is part of the way that our way of ‘being-with’ is being rendered at its border.” Jonathan Miles