Tuesday 21 April 2009

Safari bkround/Victorian novels

The word Safara comes from the Arabic meaning “to make a journey” and from that derives the Swahili synonym Safari. Nothing nobler than trade was the purpose of the first Safaris. Coastal Arabs and Swahilis traded for centuries with the African interior and Safari described not only the traders’ expeditions but also their huge caravans. The trophies sought by these 18th century explorers were ivory, rhino horn, and slaves. With the advent of European colonisation and the scramble for “A Place in the Sun”, the Safari began to become associated with exploration and exploitation of natural resources, animal and mineral.

European exploratory safari caravans were large-scale operations that involved a huge contingent of staff and crew along with supplies and weapons. They mapped out the “Dark Continent” and paved the way for scientific exploration. The expeditions of Stanley and Livingstone or Burton and Speke lasted years and involved the sort of preparations that were more commonly associated with equipping a small army. Many explorers never returned alive. Risk as well as adventure was an integral part of any Safari. Disease, starvation or attacks by wild animals or hostile tribes were part and parcel of the African Safari experience: magnificent, but potentially fatal. On the heels of the explorers came the early naturalists including men like William John Burchell, Thomas Ayres and Gustav Adolf Fischer. They were instrumental in identifying several species of animals, categorisation and taxonomy being pretty much the extent of what was considered “science” in those days.

The novels of Rider Haggard, especially his first blockbuster, King Solomon’s Mines published in 1875, introduced its hero Allan Quatermain and the thrill of life in the African Bush to an entirely new Victorian audience. This popular culture influenced generations of young Victorian men, imbuing the Safari with an irresistible allure to match the strong Empire ethic of “duty”. Inevitably, along with great naturalists and men of science came the hunters. Just as the colonial ethic was to rule and dominate the people, so the European sensibility of the time saw nothing wrong with doing the same to the wildlife. The Safari became synonymous with the “Hunt”. Killing the big beast and returning from the hunt with trophies ranging from hides, skins and heads, to an entire animal became the Safari’s sole raison d’être.

from cheesy travel blog

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