The platypus and the mermaid : and other figments of the classifying imagination

by Harriet Ritvo

Paperback, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

WB 2370 R615

Collection

Publication

Cambridge, Mass. ; London : Harvard University Press, 1998.

Description

"Cats is 'dogs,' and rabbits is 'dogs,' and so's parrots; but this `ere 'tortis' is a insect," a porter explains to an astonished traveler in a nineteenth-century Punch cartoon. Railways were not the only British institution to schematize the world. This enormously entertaining book captures the fervor of the Victorian age for classifying and categorizing every new specimen, plant or animal, that British explorers and soldiers and sailors brought home. As she depicts a whole complex of competing groups deploying rival schemes and nomenclatures, Harriet Ritvo shows us a society drawing and redrawing its own boundaries and ultimately identifying itself. The experts (whether calling themselves naturalists, zoologists, or comparative anatomists) agreed on their superior authority if nothing else, but the laymen had their say--and Ritvo shows us a world in which butchers and artists, farmers and showmen vied to impose order on the wild profusion of nature. Sometimes assumptions or preoccupations overlapped; sometimes open disagreement or hostility emerged, exposing fissures in the social fabric or contested cultural territory. Of the greatest interest were creatures that confounded or crossed established categories; in the discussions provoked by these mishaps, monstrosities, and hybrids we can see ideas about human society--about the sexual proclivities of women, for instance, or the imagined hierarchy of nations and races. A thoroughly absorbing account of taxonomy--as zoological classification and as anthropological study--The Platypus and the Mermaid offers a new perspective on the constantly shifting, ever suggestive interactions of scientific lore, cultural ideas, and the popular imagination.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mnicol
Ritvo names names. This is such an interesting reflection on how people - mainly in Britain - struggled to agree on the names of animals and plants and how to classify them. Her survey concentrates on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, bridging the triumph of Linneaus over Ray (favoured by
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Hans Sloan the originator of the British Museum). Scientific names (in binomial Latin) struggled to distinguish between species and accommodate hybrids, while farmers, butchers and hunters has their own names for both species and animals by age and gender (like teg for a two year old sheep). I live on a road named for the doomed arctic explorer Franklin who is outed for cannibalism. This is after a discussion on historical/geographical trends in classifying animals/insects/swallows nests as edible or not.
I bought this book in 1998 and never managed to complete it - until it became so useful as an aid to understanding parts of Delbourgo's 2017 book on Hans Sloane. Strange that Ritvo does not make it into Delbourgo's long reading list - they are both published by Harvard.
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Language

Original publication date

1997

Physical description

304 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

0674673581 / 9780674673588
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