Book Talk - Ryan Jones - Across Species and Humans
May 5, 12:00pm - 1:15pmMānoa Campus, 2500 Campus Road
Ryan Tucker Jones holds a PhD in history from Columbia University. He is the author of Empire of Extinction: Russians and the Strange Beasts of the Sea (Oxford, 2014) as well as Red Leviathan The Secret History of Soviet Whaling (Chicago, 2022)
Across Species and Cultures: Whales, Humans, and Pacific Worlds, edited by Ryan Tucker Jones and Angela Wanhalla was published by University of Hawai鈥橧 Press in 2023.
More than any other locale, the Pacific Ocean has been the meeting place between humans and whales. From Indigenous Pacific peoples who built lives and cosmologies around whales, to Euro-American whalers who descended upon the Pacific during the nineteenth century, and to the new forms of human-cetacean partnerships that have emerged from the late twentieth century, the relationship between these two species has been central to the ocean鈥檚 history. Across Species and Cultures: Whales, Humans, and Pacific Worlds offers for the first time a critical, wide-ranging geographical and temporal look at the varieties of whale histories in the Pacific. The essay contributors, hailing from around the Pacific, present a wealth of fascinating stories while breaking new methodological ground in environmental history, women鈥檚 history, animal studies, and Indigenous ontologies. In the process they reveal previously hidden aspects of the story of Pacific whaling, including the contributions of Indigenous people to capitalist whaling, the industry鈥檚 exceptionally far-reaching spread, and its overlooked second life as a global, industrial slaughter in the twentieth century.
While pointing to striking continuities in whaling histories around the Pacific, Across Species and Cultures also reveals deep tensions: between environmentalists and Indigenous peoples, between ideas and realities, and between the North and South Pacific. The book delves in unprecedented ways into the lives and histories of whales themselves. Despite the worst ravages of commercial and industrial whaling, whales survived two centuries of mass killing in the Pacific. Their perseverance continues to nourish many human communities around and in the Pacific Ocean where they are hunted as commodities, regarded as signs of wealth and power, act as providers and protectors, but are also ancestors, providing a bridge between human and nonhuman worlds.
Ticket Information
REgister in advance for Zoom
Event Sponsor
UH Press and Hamilton Library, Mānoa Campus
More Information
Clem Guthro, 8089567205, guthroc@hawaii.edu
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Psychology Final Oral Mānoa Campus, Zoom Meeting: https://brown.zoom.us/j/96500583136 Meeting ID: 965 0058 3136
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Book Talk - Ryan Jones - Across Species and Humans Mānoa Campus, 2500 Campus Road
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