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Borneo, Celebes, Aru
Borneo, Celebes, Aru | Alfred Russel Wallace
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
Racked with fever, virtually broke and earning a precarious living through sending back to London the plumes of beautiful birds, Wallace (1823-1913) ultimately became one of the most heroic and admirable of all scientist-explorers. Whether living with Hill Dyaks or hunting Orang-Utans or sailing on a junk to the unbelievably remote Aru islands, Wallace opens our eyes to a now long vanished world. Great Journeys allows readers to travel both around the planet and back through the centuries but also back into ideas and worlds frightening, ruthless and cruel in different ways from our own. Few reading experiences can begin to match that of engaging with writers who saw astounding things: Great civilisations, walls of ice, violent and implacable jungles, deserts and mountains, multitudes of birds and flowers new to science. Reading these books is to see the world afresh, to rediscover a time when many cultures were quite strange to each other, where legends and stories were treated as facts and in which so much was still to be discovered.
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review
squirrelbrain
Borneo, Celebes, Aru | Alfred Russel Wallace
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Mehso-so

Wallace discovered the ‘origin of the species‘ independently of Darwin in the mid-nineteenth century - this small book contains extracts of his work.

The first chapter was all about him collecting orang-utan ‘specimens‘ and I rather naively worried that he was going to keep them in captivity. But no, he blasted them out of trees with his shotgun then skinned and dissected them. 😡 Nearly put me off the rest of it...

#readingasia2021 #indonesia

MicheleinPhilly EW. HARD. PASS. 3y
Librarybelle 😮 Totally agree with @MicheleinPhilly . 3y
squirrelbrain I guess it was how things happened back then @MicheleinPhilly @Librarybelle but still not easy to read about. 3y
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julesG @MicheleinPhilly and @Librarybelle Different times. If it wasn't so darn interesting, practices like those would have put me off studying medical/scientific history. Lots of unbelievable things explorers and scientists did back then. 3y
Librarybelle @squirrelbrain @julesG Totally agree! I‘m a bit squeamish when it comes to animal violence or animal death. It also makes me very angry. But, I know advancements happened in science because of experiments. I guess my reaction was more over the method. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 3y
julesG @Librarybelle Not what we'd do today, but pretty normal in the past. I still don't like it. If I could time travel to the past, I know I'd try to shake some sense in a lot of natural scientists. 😁 3y
Caroline2 OHHH 😲 3y
Smarkies That part did throw me when I read it last year. But in general, I found him quite a decent explorer who didn't perhaps belittle everything / everyone around him (in light of European imperialism 😂😂😂) 3y
squirrelbrain Ah, you see I felt slightly differently @Smarkies - the way he described some of the culture was not belittling at all, but then the way he spoke about some of his ‘servants‘ was very imperialistic..... 3y
Smarkies @squirrelbrain unfortunately he was a product of his time 😂😂 3y
jenniferw88 Wallace is buried in my local cemetery! #stacking! 3y
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review
Smarkies
Borneo, Celebes, Aru | Alfred Russel Wallace
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Pickpick

This is an abridged text of the Malay Archipelago.
Wallace travels the jungles of Borneo to uncover the treasures within. Of course, as it is written pre 1869, it is dated - he sometimes calls the natives savages, and I flinched each time he shot an orangutan off trees to "gather the specimen", but he had a spirit of the adventurer and I appreciated that. ?

Smarkies He talks about eating the durian (which he loved) and he genuinely seemed to love mucking it out in the jungles. I found it a surprisingly "easy" read mainly due to Wallace's writing style.
If I do happen upon the full text of this - I will probably pick it up.
4y
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