Coral Empire

Coral Empire Underwater Oceans, Colonial Tropics, Visual Modernity

Hardback (10 May 2019)

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Publisher's Synopsis

From vividly colored underwater photographs of Australia's Great Barrier Reef to life-size dioramas re-creating coral reefs and the bounty of life they sustained, the work of early twentieth-century explorers and photographers fed the public's fascination with reefs. In the 1920s John Ernest Williamson in the Bahamas and Frank Hurley in Australia produced mass-circulated and often highly staged photographs and films that cast corals as industrious, colonizing creatures, and the undersea as a virgin, unexplored, and fantastical territory. In Coral Empire Ann Elias traces the visual and social history of Williamson and Hurley and how their modern media spectacles yoked the tropics and coral reefs to colonialism, racism, and the human domination of nature. Using the labor and knowledge of indigenous peoples while exoticizing and racializing them as inferior Others, Williamson and Hurley sustained colonial fantasies about people of color and the environment as endless resources to be plundered. As Elias demonstrates, their reckless treatment of the sea prefigured attitudes that caused the environmental crises that the oceans and reefs now face.

Book information

ISBN: 9781478003182
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Imprint: Duke University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 770.0922
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 296
Weight: 567g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm