Description

Book Synopsis
In 1873 the German naturalist A.B. Meyer spent five months in New Guinea. He had expected «bloodthirsty and untamed savages» and was amazed to find «men of milder customs». His compatriot Otto Finsch returned from a voyage through Hawaii, Micronesia, New Zealand and Torres Strait declaring Germany’s most respected anthropologists wrong. Human races could not be neatly distinguished: they «merge into one another to such an extent that the difference between Europeans and Papuans becomes completely unimportant». This richly interdisciplinary book explores the transformative impacts of personal encounters in Oceania on understandings of human difference, and illuminates the difficult relationship between field experience and metropolitan science in late nineteenth-century Europe.

Table of Contents
Contents: «This new and interesting world»: A.B. Meyer in New Guinea, 1873 – «It is not so!» Otto Finsch and physical diversity in Oceania, 1865-85 – «On one hundred and thirty-five Papuan skulls»: A.B. Meyer and contested craniology – «In no way savages»: Civilization and savagery in the writings of Otto Finsch.

The Race Question in Oceania: A. B. Meyer and

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    A Hardback by Hilary Howes

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 30/10/2013
      ISBN13: 9783631638743, 978-3631638743
      ISBN10: 3631638744

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In 1873 the German naturalist A.B. Meyer spent five months in New Guinea. He had expected «bloodthirsty and untamed savages» and was amazed to find «men of milder customs». His compatriot Otto Finsch returned from a voyage through Hawaii, Micronesia, New Zealand and Torres Strait declaring Germany’s most respected anthropologists wrong. Human races could not be neatly distinguished: they «merge into one another to such an extent that the difference between Europeans and Papuans becomes completely unimportant». This richly interdisciplinary book explores the transformative impacts of personal encounters in Oceania on understandings of human difference, and illuminates the difficult relationship between field experience and metropolitan science in late nineteenth-century Europe.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: «This new and interesting world»: A.B. Meyer in New Guinea, 1873 – «It is not so!» Otto Finsch and physical diversity in Oceania, 1865-85 – «On one hundred and thirty-five Papuan skulls»: A.B. Meyer and contested craniology – «In no way savages»: Civilization and savagery in the writings of Otto Finsch.

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