1st Edition

Expeditions in the Long Nineteenth Century Discovering, Surveying, and Ordering

Edited By Jörn Happel, Melanie Hussinger, Hajo Raupach Copyright 2024
    290 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book examines the processes of scientific, cultural, political, technical, colonial and violent appropriation during the 19th century.

    The 19th century was the century of world travel. The earth was explored, surveyed, described, illustrated, and categorized. Travelogues became world bestsellers. Modern technology accompanied the travelers and adventurers: clocks, a postal and telegraph system, surveying equipment, and cameras. The world grew together faster and faster. Previously unknown places became better known: the highest peaks, the coldest spots, the hottest deserts, and the most remote cities. Knowledge about the white spots of the earth was systematically collected. Those who made a name for themselves in the 19th century are still read today. Alexander von Humboldt or Charles Darwin made the epoch a scientific heyday. Ida Pfeiffer or Isabelle Bird (Bishop) traveled to distant continents and took their readers at home on insightful journeys. Hermann Vámbéry or Sir Richard Burton got to know the most remote languages and regions. There are countless travel reports about a fascinating century, which, with surveying and exploration, also brought colonial conquest and exploitation into the world. In ten individual studies, the authors explore travelers from all over the world and analyze their successes. The unifying element of all the studies is the experience of distance and its communication by means of travelogues to the armchair travelers who have stayed at home.

    This volume will be of value to students and scholars both interested in modern history, social and cultural history, and the history of science and technology.

    PART 1: DISCOVERING

    1. Estonians Travelling Around the Globe: The Impact of Family Networks on the Circumnavigation Ventures of Krusenstern and Kotzebue
    Anna Ananieva and Alexander Ananyev
    2. Scholarship and Unknown Waters. Humboldt the Scholar, Shevchenko the Painter, and Captain Butakov on the Aral Sea, 1848–49
    Jörn Happel
    3. Forms of Imperial Knowledge – The Orenburg Steppes as a Cultural Contact Zone around 1830
    Clemens Günther
    4. The Menage Expedition to the Philippines: An Unexpected Prelude to Colonial Governance
    Mark Rice

    PART 2: SURVEYING

    5. Hiking Boots and Peasant Shirts: National Science, Self-Fashioning, and the Ukrainophile Tradition of Scholarly Travel
    Fabian Baumann and Martin Rohde
    6. Consistency or Transformation? Geographical Research Practices on J. J. Rein’s Expedition to Japan
    Tobit Nauheim
    7. The Organizational and Financial Aspects of the Russian Academy of Science’s Expeditions in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
    Tatiana Yurievna Feklova

    PART 3: ORDERING

    8. “Hapa Wito!” The Narrative Longevity and Instrumentalization of German Wituland: From Explorers and Soldiers of Fortune to Visionaries and Fighters for German Weltmachtstreben
    Moritz Pöllath
    9. Finding the Stone Age. How Prehistory became a Place to Visit in New Guinea
    Mira Shah
    10. Bringing the World into View: Explorations and the Illustrated Lecture Circuit in Early Twentieth-Century Antwerp and Brussels
    Margo Buelens-Terryn and Kristof Loockx

    Biography

    Jörn Happel is professor of Eastern European and East-Central European History at Helmut Schmidt University in Hamburg (Germany) since 2020. He received his PhD from the University of Basel in 2009 with a thesis on the anti-Russian colonial uprising in Central Asia in 1916. In 2016, he received his Habilitation in Basel with a study on German-Soviet relations in the 20th century. He is currently researching the history of the Aral Sea in the 19th century.

    Melanie Hussinger M.A. is a research assistant at the Chair of Eastern European and East-Central European History at Helmut Schmidt University in Hamburg. Her research focuses Stalinism and political repressions in the European context, memory cultures and politics, and practices of remembrance and commemoration in post-socialist states. She is author of "Russlands Letzte Adressen. Gesellschaftliches Erinnern an die Opfer des Stalinismus" (Russia’s Last Addresses. Civil commemoration of Stalin’s victims, 2022).

    Hajo Raupach M. A. works as a research assistant at the Chair for Eastern European and East-Central European History at the Helmut-Schmidt-University Hamburg (Germany). He is writing his PhD thesis on economic experiments in the late Soviet Union. Other research interests include the cultural history of apocalypse and socialist architecture. Together with Louis M. Berger and Alexander Schnickmann he published the edited volume "Leben am Ende der Zeiten. Wissen, Praktiken und Zeitvorstellungen der Apokalypse" (Life at the end of time. Knowledge, practices and concepts of time of the apocalypse, 2021).