Saving whales

by Nicole Cama, Digital Curator, Australian National Maritime Museum.

I always find the amalgamation of past and current events to be a challenging task as a historian. Last week I was a guest speaker for the Dictionary of Sydney’s weekly history segment on Breakfast at 2SER radio. The International Court of Justice had, only the day before, announced its ruling against Japanese ‘scientific’ whaling in the Antarctic. Australia salivated and proclamations of victory were posted all over social media. I thought it was the perfect moment to join the conversation and highlight the important place history has in this contemporary issue.

Whaling formed an integral part of the Australian economy from the early 1800s. Sydney was the main whaling port of Australia and at least a third of the convict transports and store ships sent to the new colony before 1800 were British whaling vessels. By 1850, the commodities exported through this industry amounted to £4.2 million and between 1825 and 1879, Sydney alone had a fleet that produced whale oil and baleen (whalebone) valued at £2.6 million.

As Michelle Linder, curator of the ‘Amazing Whales’ exhibition at the Australian National Maritime Museum has explained, efforts to protect the species have only really emerged in recent decades. Although the industry had declined toward the later part of the 19th century, attitudes toward wholesale slaughter of whales took some time to change and it was not until 1979 that whaling was completely banned in Australia.

Historians seek to offer historical interpretation with a perspective on how it relates to a current issue. It’s a delicate balance, which can often carry the potential to ruffle a few feathers, especially on a sensitive issue like whaling.

As we’ve seen recently, in a debate about the tensions surrounding academic, public and family history, now more than ever historians are being called upon to engage with the contemporary preoccupations of a large variety of audiences. Let’s not forget though that relating history to the present does not just allow us to look at current events through a new lens, it offers our audiences the chance to connect with the past.

What are your thoughts about the relevance of history to contemporary debates? What are the challenges?

See the Dictionary of Sydney’s full article on Sydney’s whaling past written by Mark Howard.

Tune in to Lisa Murray on 2SER radio speaking for the Dictionary of Sydney each Wednesday!

Image:

South Sea Whalers boiling blubber c 1876
by Oswald Brierly, from the collection of the State Library of New South Wales [a128893 / DG 366] (Dixson Galleries)

2 thoughts on “Saving whales”

  1. Thanks Nicole. I think another aspect of this historical perspective is that it gives us a better appreciation of the very gradual pace at which community attitudes to whaling have evolved – not only in Australia but even in Japan where demand for whale meat is in steady decline, as cultural attitudes change and memories of post-war food shortages dissipate.

  2. Thanks Nicole for a most interesting overview. It is instructive to observe attitudes in the wider Australian community towards whaling’s history. The Sydney municipality and suburb where I live are named after the whaler Archibald Mosman. His whaling station was on what is now Mosman Bay. The municipality’s official crest/logo prominently includes a whale but, perhaps in response to the recent sensitivity you mention, this seems to be used much less often than it used to be. Feelings in Mosman about the municipality’s whaling origins are divided. In a recent exchange of letters in the local newspaper, the Vice-President of the Mosman Historical Society questioned Archibald Mosman role as the supposed founder of the suburb, suggesting that killing whales was his main claim to fame. A Mosman family member quite angrily replied, pointing to what she saw as Archibald Mosman’s positive historical role. There is, as you rightly point out, a delicate balance here.

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