This volume explores nonhuman animals’ involvement with human maritime activities in the age of sail—as well as the myriad multispecies connections formed across different geographical locations knitted together by the long history of global ship movement. Far from treating the ship as a confined space defined by the sea, Maritime Animals considers the ship’s connections to broader contexts and networks and covers a variety of locations, from the Canadian Arctic to the Pacific Islands. Each chapter focuses on the oceanic experiences of a particular species, from ship vermin, animals transported onboard as food, and animal specimens for scientific study to livestock, companion and working animals, deep-sea animals that find refuge in shipwrecks, and terrestrial animals that hunker down on flotsam and jetsam. Drawing on recent scholarship in animal studies, maritime studies, environmental humanities, and a wide range of other perspectives and storytelling approaches, Maritime Animals challenges an anthropocentric understanding of maritime history. Instead, this volume highlights the ways in which species, through their interaction with the oceans, tell stories and make histories in significant and often surprising ways.In addition to the editor, the contributors to this volume include Anna Boswell, Nancy Cushing, Lea Edgar, David Haworth, Donna Landry, Derek Lee Nelson, Jimmy Packham, Laurence Publicover, Killian Quigley, Lynette Russell, Adam Sundberg, and Thom van Dooren.
Kaori Nagai is Lecturer in Victorian Literature at the University of Kent. She is the author of Empire of Analogies: Kipling, India and Ireland and Imperial Beast Fables: Animals, Cosmopolitanism, and the British Empire.
List of IllustrationsAcknowledgementsIntroductionKaori Nagai1. Islands, Oceans, Whaling Ships, and the Mutable Ontologies of the Galápagos TortoiseDavid Haworth and Lynette Russell2. Shipworms and Maritime Ecology in the Age of SailDerek Lee Nelson and Adam Sundberg3. Sheep from Cowes: Using a Shipboard Diary to Explore Animal MobilitiesNancy Cushing4. Weapons, Commodities, Subjects: Stories of Horses at SeaDonna Landry5. Repatriating Castaways: Travel Tales of the TuataraAnna Boswell6. Rattus- Homo- Machine: Rats as Seafarers in the Nineteenth CenturyKaori Nagai7. “Beloved Member of Our Team”: The Sled Dogs of the St. RochLea Edgar8. The Decontextualized Deep: Fathoming the WhaleJimmy Packham and Laurence Publicover9. The Encrusting Ocean: Life- Forms of the Spongy WreckKillian Quigley10. Drifting with Snails: Stories from Hawai‘iThom van DoorenList of ContributorsIndex
“Maritime Animals provides a readable, highly entertaining, fascinating look at the roles animals and other non-human agents played in the making of the maritime world.”—J. Rankin Choice
Keith Botelho, Keith Botelho, Joseph Campana, Kennesaw State University) Botelho, Keith (Professor of English, Rice University) Campana, Joseph (Alan Dugald McKillop Professor of English