Parlor Ponds

The Cultural Work of the American Home Aquarium, 1850 - 1970

Judith Hamera author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:The University of Michigan Press

Published:30th Jan '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Parlor Ponds cover

Parlor Ponds: The Cultural Work of the American Home Aquarium, 1850–1970 examines the myriad cultural meanings of the American home aquarium during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and argues that the home aquarium provided its enthusiasts with a potent tool for managing the challenges of historical change, from urbanization to globalization. The tank could be a window to an alien world, a theater for domestic melodrama, or a vehicle in a fantastical undersea journey. Its residents were seen as inscrutable and wholly disposable "its,” as deeply loved and charismatic individuals, and as alter egos by aquarists themselves.

Parlor Ponds fills a gap in the growing field of animal studies by showing that the tank is an emblematic product of modernity, one using elements of exploration, technology, science, and a commitment to rigorous observation to contain anxieties spawned by industrialization, urbanization, changing gender roles, and imperial entanglements. Judith Hamera engages advertisements, images, memoirs, public aquarium programs, and enthusiast publications to show how the history of the aquarium illuminates complex cultural attitudes toward nature and domestication, science and religion, gender and alterity, and national conquest and environmental stewardship with an emphasis on the ways it illuminates American public discourse on colonial and postcolonial expansion.

A wonderful, elegant, beautifully written book—keenly observed and trenchantly argued.” — Jane Desmond, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

ISBN: 9780472051663

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 440g

312 pages