Article ID: CBB871364355

“Extraordinarily Inconspicuous” Elephants: The Interspecies Constitution and Contestations of the Ivory Commodity Frontier in Nineteenth-Century South Sudan (2024)

unapi

Elephants have been extraordinarily inconspicuous in the history of the ivory trade in nineteenth-century southern Sudan. One explanation for this is the process of commodification, which abstracted ivory from its animal origins and rendered invisible both elephants and the indigenous knowledge and labor that was vital to the trade. However, this process of commodification was incomplete, unstable, and fundamentally shaped by the relations of elephants, humans, cattle, and their environments. Through their movements and bodily nature, elephants played a part in determining the geography and structures of the ivory trade, which in turn shaped the territory and enduring marginalization of southern Sudan as an exploited periphery. At the same time, through cultural representations of their behavior, elephants also indirectly contributed to the indigenous value systems that limited commodification and prioritized animate life over inanimate objects.

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Authors & Contributors
Kiechle, Melanie
McClellan, Andrew
Plumb, Christopher
Rothfels, Nigel T.
Scigliano, Eric
Shayt, David H.
Journals
American Historical Review
Archives of Natural History
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Indian Journal of History of Science
Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Journal of Social History
Publishers
Johns Hopkins University Press
Cambridge University Press
Berghahn Books
Houghton Mifflin
Oxford University Press
University of Chicago Press
Concepts
Elephants
Human-animal relationships
Natural history
Animals
Colonialism
Nature and its relationship to culture; human-nature relationships
People
Barnum, Phineas Taylor
Darwin, Charles Robert
Ruskin, John
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
17th century
18th century
21st century
Places
India
Great Britain
United States
Africa
East Africa
Senegal
Institutions
Tufts University
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