Article ID: CBB013750834

Scurrying seafarers: shipboard rats, plague, and the land/sea border (2023)

unapi

This paper provides a broad overview of spatial, architectural, and sensory relationships between rats and humans on British and American vessels from approximately the 1850s–1950s. Taking rats as my primary historical actors, I show how humans attempted to prevent the movement of these animals between ports across three periods. Firstly, the mid- to- late-nineteenth century, where few attempts were made to prevent rats from boarding ships, and where a multiplicity of human/rat relationships can be located. Secondly, the 1890s–1920s, in which port authorities erected anti-rat borders to lock these animals on land or at sea. Finally, the 1920s–50s, where ships were reconstructed to eliminate all possibilities of rodent inhabitation and to interrupt their transit between ports. Ship rats, I argue, not only demonstrate the fragility of historical rodent-control efforts, but also encourage oceanic historians to consider how animals have negotiated and shaped boundaries between spheres of land and sea.

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https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB013750834/

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Authors & Contributors
Gray, Steven
Arner, Katherine
Dunn, Richard
Ferreiro, Larrie David
Hardy, Anne Irmgard
Langston, Nancy
Journals
Mariner's Mirror
Archive for History of Exact Sciences
Archives of Natural History
Australian Historical Studies
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Environmental History
Publishers
Ashgate
Brandeis University Press
English Heritage
University of North Carolina Press
Concepts
Ships and shipbuilding
Animal migration; transhumance
Human-animal relationships
Military technology
Public health
Interdisciplinary approach to knowledge
People
Beach, Frank Ambrose
Bentham, Samuel
Maudslay, Henry
Telford, Thomas
Wagner, Moritz
Watt, James
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
21st century
17th century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
United States
North Carolina (U.S.)
Australia
Europe
Germany
Institutions
Great Britain. Royal Navy
American Museum of Natural History, New York
University of Oslo
Australia. Royal Australian Navy
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