Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A Tale of Two Stuffed Fish

Electronic data

Links

View graph of relations

A Tale of Two Stuffed Fish: Coastal Encounters in Sir John Richardson’s Scientific Writings

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

A Tale of Two Stuffed Fish: Coastal Encounters in Sir John Richardson’s Scientific Writings. / Donaldson, Christopher; Maclaine, James.
In: Romanticism on the Net, No. 79, 31.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@article{940004ecd44b488d8a06fecfca51d031,
title = "A Tale of Two Stuffed Fish: Coastal Encounters in Sir John Richardson{\textquoteright}s Scientific Writings",
abstract = "This essay delves into the history of two stuffed fish in London{\textquoteright}s Natural History Museum. These fish came from opposite ends of the earth: one from southern Australia, the other from northern Canada. But they were both documented and named by a Scotsman, Sir John Richardson (1787–1865). Richardson{\textquoteright}s encounters with these fish sheds light on different aspects of his career as a naval surgeon, polar explorer, and natural historian. More importantly, though, these encounters also reveal how European knowledge of the world{\textquoteright}s coastal environments was created during the Romantic era. In considering the context and consequences of these encounters, this essay reflects on how the subject of this special issue, though nationally defined, connects with broader histories of nineteenth-century exploration and empire. The places where these fish were caught lay well beyond Scotland. Nonetheless, these fish are relevant to the study of Scotland{\textquoteright}s Coastal Romanticisms, and tracing their history invites us to rethink the geographical assumptions that often govern the study of national pasts",
author = "Christopher Donaldson and James Maclaine",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "31",
language = "English",
journal = "Romanticism on the Net",
issn = "1467-1255",
publisher = "St. Catherine's College",
number = "79",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Tale of Two Stuffed Fish

T2 - Coastal Encounters in Sir John Richardson’s Scientific Writings

AU - Donaldson, Christopher

AU - Maclaine, James

PY - 2024/1/31

Y1 - 2024/1/31

N2 - This essay delves into the history of two stuffed fish in London’s Natural History Museum. These fish came from opposite ends of the earth: one from southern Australia, the other from northern Canada. But they were both documented and named by a Scotsman, Sir John Richardson (1787–1865). Richardson’s encounters with these fish sheds light on different aspects of his career as a naval surgeon, polar explorer, and natural historian. More importantly, though, these encounters also reveal how European knowledge of the world’s coastal environments was created during the Romantic era. In considering the context and consequences of these encounters, this essay reflects on how the subject of this special issue, though nationally defined, connects with broader histories of nineteenth-century exploration and empire. The places where these fish were caught lay well beyond Scotland. Nonetheless, these fish are relevant to the study of Scotland’s Coastal Romanticisms, and tracing their history invites us to rethink the geographical assumptions that often govern the study of national pasts

AB - This essay delves into the history of two stuffed fish in London’s Natural History Museum. These fish came from opposite ends of the earth: one from southern Australia, the other from northern Canada. But they were both documented and named by a Scotsman, Sir John Richardson (1787–1865). Richardson’s encounters with these fish sheds light on different aspects of his career as a naval surgeon, polar explorer, and natural historian. More importantly, though, these encounters also reveal how European knowledge of the world’s coastal environments was created during the Romantic era. In considering the context and consequences of these encounters, this essay reflects on how the subject of this special issue, though nationally defined, connects with broader histories of nineteenth-century exploration and empire. The places where these fish were caught lay well beyond Scotland. Nonetheless, these fish are relevant to the study of Scotland’s Coastal Romanticisms, and tracing their history invites us to rethink the geographical assumptions that often govern the study of national pasts

M3 - Journal article

JO - Romanticism on the Net

JF - Romanticism on the Net

SN - 1467-1255

IS - 79

ER -