Humans and Aquatic Animals in Early Modern America and Africa

Humans and Aquatic Animals in Early Modern America and Africa (Environmental Humanities in Pre-modern Cultures) book cover

Humans and Aquatic Animals in Early Modern America and Africa (Environmental Humanities in Pre-modern Cultures)

Author(s): Cristina Brito (Author)

  • Publisher: ‎ Routledge
  • Publication Date: ‎ July 24, 2023
  • Edition: ‎ 1st
  • Language: ‎ English
  • Print length: ‎ 270 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 946372821X
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 9789463728218

Book Description

This book deals with peoples’ practices, perceptions, emotions and feelings towards aquatic animals, their ecosystems and nature on the early modern Atlantic coasts by addressing exploitation, use, fear, empathy, otherness, and indifference in the relationships established with aquatic environments and resources by Indigenous Peoples and Europeans. It focuses on large aquatic fauna, especially manatees (but also sharks, sea turtles, seals, and others) as they were hunted, consumed, venerated, conceptualised, and recorded by different societies across the early colonial Americas and West Africa. Through a cross-cultural approach drawing on concepts and analytical methods from marine environmental history, the blue humanities and animal studies, this book addresses more-than-human systems where ecologies, geographies, cosmogonies, and cultures are an entangled web of interdependencies.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“In this recent book, biologist and environmental historian Cristina Brito explores the early-modern Atlantic spaces of cross-cultural interspecies interactions from a global Portuguese perspective. In her account, aquatic animals were at once resources, partners, and symbols in the context of early American-European and African encounters and clashes, when Iberian conquerors crossed the Oceans and set in communication continents that had been previously separated. Her aim is to contribute to Anthropocene humanities’ multidisciplinarity by looking at the many agencies of history-making […] Indeed, extinction and the extirpation of future generations – human and nonhuman alike – marks the tragedy of the Anthropocene. But since human relations with their environments and other species are not only destructive, as they are revealing of strong ties of care and empathy as well, Brito’s retrospective glance on historical water-cultures also opens up the possibility to imagine a different, more sustainable future.” -- Pietro Daniel Omodeo, in Lagoonscapes, no. 1 (21 July 2025)

About the Author

Cristina Brito is an Associate Professor at the History Department at NOVA FCSH, Lisbon, and researcher at CHAM - Center for the Humanities. She is one of the PIs of the ERC Synergy Grant 4-OCEANS: Human History of Marine Life, and of two EEA Grants Bilateral Funds Initiatives.

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