Article ID: CBB358198797

Malinowski and malacology: Global value systems and the issue of duplicates (2022)

unapi

This article situates the collecting practices of museums of natural history in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in dialogue with similar practices amongst societies in the Pacific by focusing on how European curators, dealers in natural history and Pacific Islanders shared a common fascination with Spondylus shells. In particular, this article examines the processes for turning Spondylus shells into unique or duplicate specimens. Spondylus shells were crucial for regulating gift and commercial exchanges in the societies of both regions. Famously, the anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski claimed that these shells were an essential element of the gift-based kula exchange, which helped him distinguish Western capitalist society from less developed societies without commercial trade. Yet Spondylus shells were also collected and exchanged as gifts amongst British and European naturalists in this period, performing the same roles as in Melanesia. In addition, such gift exchanges could only come into being thanks to the actions of commercially motivated dealers, located both in the Pacific and in Europe, who were the suppliers of these shells both to Melanesian participants in the kula and to Western natural historians and collectors. These observations call into question earlier arguments that equate modernity with the rise of commercial capitalism. It is instead claimed that commercial and gift exchanges were intricately connected and reliant on each other throughout the period, whether in the worlds of Western museums or in Pacific archipelagos. The act of turning Spondylus shells into unique or duplicate specimens was the key tool for regulating these exchanges.

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Article Ina Heumann; Anne Greenwood MacKinney; Rainer Buschmann (2022) Introduction: the issue of duplicates. British Journal for the History of Science (pp. 257-278). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Cianfanelli, Simone
Larson, Frances
Beckman, Jenny
Benocci, Andrea
Bloch, D.
Burchsted, Fred
Journals
Archives of Natural History
HOST: Journal of History of Science and Technology
Museum History Journal
British Journal for the History of Science
Journal of the History of Collections
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Edições Colibri
Manchester University Press
Princeton University Press
University of Pennsylvania Press
Concepts
Natural history
Collectors and collecting
Museums
Material culture
Shells
Bibliographies
People
Heron-Allen, Edward
Paulucci, Marianna
Stimpson, William
Wellcome, Henry Solomon
Worm, Ole
Necker, Louis Albert
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
17th century
18th century
20th century
Early modern
Places
Great Britain
Italy
Bohemia
Central Europe
Berlin (Germany)
Geneva (Switzerland)
Institutions
Universidade de Coimbra
Oxford University
Natural History Museum (London, England)
Naturhistoriska riksmuseet
Berlin Zoological Museum
Pitt Rivers Museum (University of Oxford)
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