Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781421448565 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Segregated Species

Pests, Knowledge, and Boundaries in South Africa, 1910-1948
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Sales
Points
Google
Preview
A timely history of the connections between science, segregation, and species in twentieth-century South Africa. Throughout the twentieth century, rural South Africa was dominated by systems of racial segregation and apartheid that brutally oppressed its Black population. At the same time, the countryside was defined by a related settler obsession: the control of animals that farmers, scientists, and state officials considered pests. Elephants rampaged on farmlands, trampling fences, crops, and occasionally humans. Grain-eating birds flocked on plantations, devouring harvests. Bubonic plague crept across the veld in the bodies of burrowing and crop-devouring rodents. In Segregated Species, Jules Skotnes-Brown argues that racial segregation and pest control were closely connected in early twentieth-century South Africa. Strategies for the containment of pests were redeployed for the management of humans and vice versa. Settlers blamed racialized populations for the abundance of pests and mobilized metaphors of pestilence to dehumanize them. Even knowledge produced about pests was segregated into the binary categories of "native" and "scientific." Black South Africans critiqued such injustices, and some circulated revolutionary rhetoric through images and metaphors of locusts. Ultimately, pest-control practices played an important role in shaping colonial hierarchies of race and species and in mediating relationships among human groups. Skotnes-Brown demonstrates that the history of South Africa-and colonial history generally-cannot be fully understood without analyzing the treatment of both animals and humans.
Jules Skotnes-Brown (EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND) is a historian of science, animals, and colonialism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of St. Andrews.
Note on Terminology and Translations Acknowledgements Introduction Interlude 1: Rogues of the Addo Bush 1. Domestication and Degeneration: the establishment of the Addo Elephant National Park Interlude 2: The Great Game Drive 2. Transporting Trypanosomes: ecologies of health and knowledge in Zululand Interlude 3: The Passing of the Locust 3. Birds and the Balance of Nature: anthropomorphism, zoomorphism, and economic ornithology Interlude 4: Lefu la Seoa 4. Subterranean Swarms: the construction of 'veld plague', influx-control, and the war on rodents Interlude 5: The Gemsbok Play 5. Desert Denizens: Kalahari San and the Gemsbok National Park Conclusion
A timely history of the connections between science, segregation, and species in twentieth-century South Africa.
Google Preview content