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引用次数: 0
摘要
近几十年来,历史学家越来越关注那些负责将标本从野外采集、保存和安全运输到博物馆或实验室的人员在后勤方面遇到的挑战和困难。本文在这一趋势的基础上,超越表面的成功,考虑了船上旅行以及海上和沿海采集活动的实践和实际情况。讨论的重点是威廉-亨利-哈维(William Henry Harvey)的例子,他于 1853 年前往澳大利亚寻找隐花植物--苔藓、地衣和藻类等非开花植物。在他与家人和朋友的私人通信中,哈维深入剖析了当时所有收藏者所面临的挑战和障碍。他的经历从根本上说是由他在旅途中遇到的物质文化、体现知识和物理限制所塑造的。从某种程度上说,新技术和英国的全球帝国所建立的联系为船上和岸上的收藏活动提供了便利。但它们也取决于具体的环境,依赖于当地的代理人和参与者,以及从事收藏者的物质和技术设施(和限制)。哈维等人的例子揭示了收藏家个人真实的 "生活 "经历、他们在积累藏品时遇到的困难和挑战,以及他们所依赖的人际网络。
'The troubles of collecting': William Henry Harvey and the practicalities of natural-history collecting in Britain's nineteenth-century world.
In recent decades, historians have become increasingly interested in the logistical challenges and difficulties encountered by those responsible for the collection, preservation and safe transport of specimens from the field to the museum or laboratory. This article builds on this trend by looking beyond apparent successes to consider the practices and practicalities of shipboard travel and maritime and coastal collecting activities. The discussion focuses on the example of William Henry Harvey, who travelled to Australia in pursuit of cryptogams - non-flowering plants like mosses, lichens and algae - in 1853. In his private correspondence to family and friends, Harvey offered insights into the challenges and obstacles faced by all collectors in the period. His experiences were fundamentally shaped by the material culture, embodied knowledge and physical constraints he encountered on the way. On one level, shipboard and onshore collecting activities were facilitated by the connections forged by new technologies and Britain's global empire. But they also depended on specific contexts and relied on local agents and actors, as well as on the physical and technical facilities (and limitations) of those doing the collecting. The examples of Harvey and others shed light on the real, 'lived' experiences of individual collectors, the difficulties and challenges they encountered in amassing their collections, and the networks of people on which they relied.
期刊介绍:
This leading international journal publishes scholarly papers and review articles on all aspects of the history of science. History of science is interpreted widely to include medicine, technology and social studies of science. BJHS papers make important and lively contributions to scholarship and the journal has been an essential library resource for more than thirty years. It is also used extensively by historians and scholars in related fields. A substantial book review section is a central feature. There are four issues a year, comprising an annual volume of over 600 pages. Published for the British Society for the History of Science