1st Edition

The Giant Squid in Transatlantic Culture The Monsterization of Molluscs

By Otto Latva Copyright 2024
270 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

270 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

270 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book builds upon the extensive study of the historical relationship between sea animals and humans in transatlantic culture during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It exposes the present understanding of the human relationship with the giant squid not only as too simplistic but also as historically inaccurate. For instance, it redefines the earlier understanding that humans and... Read more

List of figures

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Introduction: Humans, Cephalopods, and History

Part I: The Era of New Ideas and Far-Reaching Seafaring, 1763–1802

1. The Late Eighteenth-Century Encounters with Giant-Sized Squid

2. Narratives and Enlightenment Theories

Part II: The Years of Uncertainty and Discovery, 1802–61

3. The Early Nineteenth-Century Encounters with Giant-sized Squid

4. The Enormous Squid, Zoology, and the Public Discussion

Part III: The Period of Cephalopod Monsters, 1861–99

5. The Late Nineteenth-Century Encounters with Giant-sized Squid

6. The Enormous Squid in Scientific and Public Discussion in the 1860s

7. The Emergence of the Giant Squid and how it Became a Monster

Conclusion

Index

 

Biography

Otto Latva is a historian focusing on human-animal and human-plant studies as well as environmental history. He has studied widely the early modern as well as the nineteenth-century and twentieth-century societies and cultures. In his previous studies, Latva has especially investigated the shared history of humans and animals and the long-term understanding of the marine environment. He is currently working as a university lecturer in Cultural Heritage Studies at the University of Turku, Finland. He also leads a research project Disappeared, Endangered and Newly Arrived Species: The Human Relationship with the Changing Biodiversity of the Baltic Sea (HumBio), funded by the Academy of Finland.

"This bold, original book is the history of a shared relationship between two intelligent, social species with entangled pasts – yet who are utterly alien to each other. It takes us on a deep, spectral journey, fathoming brand new territory in Human Animal Studies, environmental history, Transatlantic Studies, and Enlightenment historiography. We follow the squid into interdisciplinary depths, pursue subterranean archives, chart sea flows that connect an international transatlantic world. Fundamentally, we are shown that it was not the squid who was the monster but our own human imaginative hunger."

Sandra Swart, Stellenbosch University, South Africa