《非洲博物学家:罗德尼·卡林顿·伍德1889-1962年的生平与时代》,大卫·哈波德著。布莱顿:图书协会出版社,2011。xx + 290页。ISBN 9781846245558。£17.95。

J. Mackenzie
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引用次数: 1

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《非洲博物学家:罗德尼·卡林顿·伍德1889-1962年的生平与时代》,大卫·哈波德著。布莱顿:图书协会出版社,2011。xx + 290页。ISBN 9781846245558。£17.95。大英帝国为个人提供了非凡的机会,让他们过着近乎游牧的生活。有些人,像罗德尼·伍德,换了一份又一份工作,从来没有在一个地方定居太久,同时追求着一连串的激情——狩猎、收藏、录音、研究自然、为博物馆提供服务,但都是业余爱好者,从某种意义上说,从来没有担任过与这些活动有关的任何专业职位。伍德的一生跨越了大英帝国在非洲的鼎盛时期,并在非洲大陆中部和东部地区的非殖民化浪潮之前结束。对于一个伦敦商业精英来说,他的起点似乎相当传统:在苏格兰佩思郡(Perthshire)上预科学校,在哈罗公学(Harrow)接受教育,为进入父亲的酒商行业接受培训。但伍德是逃跑的人之一。他以后的生活一点也不传统。1909年,年仅20岁的伍德前往南罗得西亚(津巴布韦)的一个农场工作。不久,他来到尼亚萨兰(马拉维),在那里从事棉花种植和茶叶种植。他居住的地方与这个国家的历史有着深刻的联系,比如奇罗莫(Chiromo)和麦克利尔角(Cape Maclear),但他的心思总是放在其他事情上,而不是种植这种经济必需品。他是一名猎人,收集战利品,其中一些被记录为创纪录的尺寸,但他很快就养成了对自然的尊重,他成为了一名改过自新的猎人,并致力于各种不同领域的自然历史收集。他收集小型哺乳动物、昆虫和蝴蝶,还有鸟类,把许多标本送到伦敦自然历史博物馆,在那里他很快就有了专业联系。虽然他主要是自学成才,但他在标本剥制和记录方面似乎一丝不苟,正是这一点使他对后来的生物学家具有如此大的价值。他的许多标本都不为科学所知,因此成为了“类型”,还有一些以他的名字命名。但他的生活变得更加丰富多彩。他曾在加拿大做过一段时间的高级童子军。他发现了塞舌尔的乐趣,并在那里买了土地。他成为了其他收藏家的顾问,特别是在20世纪30年代,他与退休的海军上将莱恩斯一起在东非和中非进行自然历史收集探险。他把时间花在马拉维和塞舌尔之间,作为一个收集游牧民,他转向了贝壳学,收集了某些特殊形式的贝壳。他的收藏品变得如此之多,以至于一些被出售,并在美国许多不同的博物馆中出现。…
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African Naturalist: the Life and Times of Rodney Carrington Wood 1889-1962, by David Happold. Brighton: Book Guild Publishing, 2011. xx + 290 pp. ISBN 9781846245558. £17.95.
African Naturalist: the Life and Times of Rodney Carrington Wood 1889-1962, by David Happold. Brighton: Book Guild Publishing, 2011. xx + 290 pp. ISBN 9781846245558. £17.95. The British Empire offered extraordinary opportunities for individuals to follow an almost nomadic existence. Some, like Rodney Wood, flitted from job to job, never settling anywhere for long, while pursuing a succession of passions - hunting, collecting, recording, studying nature, supplying museums, yet all as an amateur, in the sense of never holding any professional position relating to these activities. Wood's life spanned the high point of the British Empire in Africa and ended just before the wave of decolonisations in the Central and Eastern areas of the continent. It seemed to have a fairly conventional start for a member of the London commercial elite: a prep school in Perthshire, Scotland, education at Harrow, training for entry into his father's business as a vintner. But Wood was one of those who broke loose. None of the rest of his life was in any way conventional. In 1909, barely twenty years old, Wood headed for Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) to work on a farm. Soon he was in Nyasaland (Malawi), where he was involved in cotton planting and then tea. He lived in places that were deeply embedded in the history of the country, like Chiromo and Cape Maclear, but his mind was always on other things than the economic necessities of planting. He was a hunter and made collections of trophies, some of which were recorded as of record dimensions, but he soon developed such a respect for nature that he became a reformed hunter and devoted himself to natural history collecting in a variety of different fields. He collected small mammals, bugs and butterflies, and also birds, sending many specimens to the Natural History Museum in London, where he soon had professional contacts. Although he was largely self-trained, he seems to have been meticulous in his taxidermy and in his recording and it is this which gives him such value for subsequent biologists. A number of his specimens were unknown to science and thus became 'types' while several had his name attached to them. But his life became more varied. He spent some time in Canada working as a senior scout in the scouting movement there. He discovered the joys of the Seychelles and bought land there. He became an adviser to other collectors and, in particular, travelled with the retired Admiral Lynes on his natural history collecting expeditions in East and Central Africa in the 1930s. He divided his time between Malawi and the Seychelles and, as the collecting nomad that he was, he moved on to conchology, coElecting certain specialist forms of shells. His collections became so considerable that some were sold and turn up in a number of different museums in the United States. …
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