Kurlansky, Mark. Cod: The Biography of the Fish that Changed the World. New York: Penguin Books, 1997.
This is an interesting book with an overstated sub-title. Kurlansky does fit cod into world history, but this is not a book that tries to explain western civilization based on one fish. Instead it traces the search, destruction and resurrection of this species. From medieval fisherman that traveled to the New World before Columbus in search of cod and developed new ways to store and transport it to the modern dilemma of over fishing Kurlansky paints a subtle portrait of how one species caused wars, altered peace negotiations and is a point of contention to this day. In making this more of a popular history book Kurlansky adds recipes for cooking cod from the various cultures that have used cod as a staple food and based on the changing preservation techniques. At the end of the book the author does become a bit preachy about the need to preserve the fish, but this is excusable given the tremendous excesses in fishing that he describes throughout the book. In addition, he does highlight the contested nature of fish preservation and the effect that overfishing has had on the economies and cultures of fisherman across the North Atlantic. Showing quotas and fishing bans to not be simple acts of preservation but contested practices that often devastate local fishermen.
"An evill custome can never be accepted for a good law," James I of England in Daemonologie.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
The beginning
Every blog must start with a first post and this is it. I have created this blog to express random thoughts and see if I can provoke a response from anyone. Although I seriously doubt if anyone will ever read any of the posts on this site. Before anyone goes all Freudian on me I should say that this is not a Jungian red book or anything. These are not me deepest darkest thoughts. I am not a fool and know that anything on the web can be printed and used against you at a later time. This is not paranoia this is the simple fact that the internet is as close to a free market place of ideas as has existed in centuries.
Also these thoughts are not totally random. I will try and restrict them to topics of academia, law, society, history, and related topics. So with much delay here we will go.
Also these thoughts are not totally random. I will try and restrict them to topics of academia, law, society, history, and related topics. So with much delay here we will go.
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