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Stories of stones and bones: disciplinarity, narrative and practice in British popular prehistory, 1911–1935

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2016

AMANDA REES*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, UK. Email: amanda.rees@york.ac.uk.

Abstract

This paper explores how three central figures in the field of British prehistory – Sir Arthur Keith, Sir Grafton Elliot Smith and Louis Leakey – deployed different disciplinary practices and narrative devices in the popular accounts of human bio-cultural evolution that they produced during the early decades of the twentieth century. It shows how they used a variety of strategies, ranging from virtual witness through personal testimony to tactile demonstration, to ground their authority to interpret the increasingly wide range of fossil material available and to answer the bewildering variety of questions that could be asked about them. It investigates the way in which they positioned their own professional expertise in relation to fossil interpretation, particularly with regard to the – sometimes controversial – use they made of concepts, evidence and practices drawn from other disciplines. In doing so, they made claims that went beyond their original disciplinary boundaries. The paper argues that while none of these writers were able, ultimately, to support the wider claims they made regarding human prehistory, the nature of these claims deserves much closer attention, particularly with respect to the public role that historians of science can and should play in relation to present-day calls for greater interdisciplinarity.

Type
Special Section: Palaeonarratives and Palaeopractices: Excavating and Interpreting Deep History
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 2016 

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References

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2 Leakey, Louis, The Stone Age Cultures of Kenya Colony, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1931 Google Scholar; and Leakey, The Stone Age Races of Kenya, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1935. Most of his later popular work appeared in National Geographic and the Illustrated London News ( Morell, Virginia, Ancestral Passions: The Leakey Family and the Quest for Humankind's Beginnings, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995 Google Scholar), and his last popular book appeared in 1969 (Louis Leakey and Vanne Goodall, Unveiling Man's Origins: Ten Decades of Thought about Human Origins, Cambridge, MA: Schenkman).

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4 Leakey, op. cit. (1), p. 2. Note that the authors of the texts discussed in this article commonly used what would now be regarded as sexist or racist language. When quoting or paraphrasing their work, I have followed their usage. I do so without either condoning or accepting their implications.

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7 Series such as the Thinker's Library and the Forum series, both produced by the commercial publishers Watts and Co., frequently included volumes devoted to both human prehistory and human evolution, while the ten-volume Corridors of Time series written by Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure for the Clarendon Press (1926–1957) took the ‘serious student’ from the origin of life to the Iron Age. See also Bowler, Peter, ‘Experts and publishers: writing popular science in early twentieth-century Britain, writing popular history of science now’, BJHS (2006) 39, pp. 159187 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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17 See Goodrum, ‘The idea of prehistory’, op. cit. (11).

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33 His Autobiography (Keith, op. cit. (13), p. 318) notes, ‘I never felt satisfied about a discovery until I had examined the scene in which it was made’. Sommer, op. cit. (11), makes a similar point in relation to Fairfield Osborn.

34 An unpublished (possibly unposted) letter in the University of Manchester archives gives context to Keith's potential isolation: with respect to the Piltdown skull reconstruction controversy, he wrote, ‘I have repeatedly had quite reasonable people say “We would take Keith's word for it, if we were sure he was not trying to bolster up [the antiquity of the] Galley Hill and Ipswich”’ fossils (John Rylands University Library Archives, GB 133 GES).

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