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    Behemoth: The History of the Elephant in America

    3.0 3

    by Ronald B. Tobias


    Paperback

    $14.99
    $14.99

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    • ISBN-13: 9780062244857
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Publication date: 10/08/2013
    • Pages: 512
    • Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 7.90(h) x 1.00(d)

    Ronald B. Tobias is a professor of science and natural history filmmaking in the School of Film and Photography at Montana State University. He was a producer for the Discovery Channel for fifteen years and has produced, written, and directed more than thirty natural history films, many of which have appeared on the Discovery Channel and Animal Planet.

    Table of Contents

    1 Seeing the Elephant 1

    2 The Unfortunate Man Who Won an Elephant in a Raffle 24

    3 Race to the White House 43

    4 The Voyages of Columbus 64

    5 Romeo and Juliet, an American Tragedy 79

    6 Amok 93

    7 Farming with Elephants 143

    8 Jumbo Nation 151

    9 Jumbo Saves the Brooklyn Bridge 179

    10 The Skeleton and the Manikin 191

    11 White Elephants 206

    12 Elephant Bizarre 225

    13 Born in the USA 246

    14 Matriarch 283

    15 AC/DC 292

    16 Circus Day, Butte, Montana, August 23, 1900 314

    17 Elephant Baseball 339

    18 A Lynching in Tennessee 347

    19 How Jumbo Got His Shnozz 365

    20 Secret Agents 380

    21 Seeing the Digital Elephant 390

    Notes 441

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    In the two hundred years since their arrival in America, elephants have worked on farms, mills, mines, and railroads, in Hollywood, and in professional baseball. They've contributed to the national discourse on civil rights, immigration, politics, and capitalism. They became so deeply ingrained in the American way that they were once accorded the rights of American citizenship, including the right to vote and the right to provide testimony under oath—and they have incurred brutal punishments when convicted of human crimes.

    In Behemoth, Ronald B. Tobias has written the first comprehensive history of the elephant in America. As tragic as it is comic, this enthralling chronicle traces this animal's indelible footprint on American culture.

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    Publishers Weekly
    08/26/2013
    Documentarian and professor of filmmaking Tobias traces the history of the captive elephant in the U.S. and its development as a symbol of a young rebellious nation. He includes examples of late-19th-century political cartoons by Thomas Nast that established the elephant as a symbol of the Republican Party, resulting in the 1911 race between an actual donkey and an elephant from New York to Washington, D.C., to represent the presidential race of Wilson vs. Taft. He tells the often-tragic stories of elephants in the glory days of the circus. Jumbo, procured from England by P.T. Barnum with much controversy, was killed by a train. Barnum then toured with Jumbo’s “widow” for two seasons before she perished in a fire. Topsy was famously electrocuted by Thomas Edison after a lifetime of abuse and mistreatment. And Big Mary, famous for “playing baseball,” was hanged by a railroad crane for killing her incompetent trainer. Finally, Tobias looks at the more recent treatment of elephants, at the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee and the Los Angeles Zoo. This book is a vital history lesson on the myriad ways elephants have permeated American culture, from Taft to Dumbo; readers should be advised, however, that it includes graphic depictions of animal cruelty. (Oct)
    Marc Bekoff
    Behemoth is a fitting title for this most welcomed book about elephants — huge, magnificent, and sentient beings with legendary memories — who have captured the hearts of innumerable people. Ronald Tobias’s book is a wonderful read, packed with detailed information about these iconic animals.
    David Hancocks
    Behemoth reveals in devastating detail the 200-year history of the elephant in America. . . . Ronald Tobias’s meticulous research should encourage us to make the future for these animals a brighter, more respectful, and more caring episode.
    John Heminway
    Carefully researched and elegantly written, Ronald Tobias’s book brings shape and color to America’s longstanding tradition of hucksterism-this time, at the expense of the world’s largest land animal.
    Dr. Rob Atkinson
    In his unique book Behemoth, Ronald Tobias brilliantly weaves the story of captive elephants into the very fabric of America’s history, revealing the glory and the grief until the reader hangs his head and vows that they shall never again suffer as they have and, disturbingly, still do.
    Ed Stewart
    Behemoth is an astounding collection of everything elephant in America: the most magnificent animals on earth against small, exploitive humans. The battle continues, and the elephants are losing.
    The Boston Globe
    A thoroughly entertaining history.
    Kirkus Reviews
    2013-10-01
    A personable exploration of how the pachyderm has impacted America since its arrival in 1796. Former Discovery Channel producer and natural history filmmaker Tobias chronicles the history of the world's largest living land animal from its arrival on American shores when market trader Jacob Crowninshield commissioned a young female calf to be transported by sea from Calcutta to New York. Crowninshield greatly profited from the gargantuan animal's public exhibition and swift sale, as would a long line of others, including entrepreneur-turned–circus man Hachaliah Bailey and curiosity museum curator P.T. Barnum. Tobias highlights others who have benefitted, as well, including Abraham Lincoln and the Republican Party, who began using elephants as its branding symbol since its formalization in 1874. The author also tracks the performance "careers" of monstrous circus elephants, like mid-1800 ringmasters Raymond and Waring's "Hannibal," who registered at nearly 12 feet tall and 15,000 pounds; Tusko, dubbed "the World's Meanest Elephant"; and Jumbo, Barnum's lucrative cash cow. The accidental (and rage-induced) trampling of handlers, trainers and spectators, the author observes, created a fearfulness that inevitably led to their historically cruel but responsibly necessary euthanasia. Still, audiences remained transfixed by the sheer heft of these animal oddities, as did farmers and collectors. In lighter chapters, Tobias taps the pachyderm's connection to Shakespeare, the birthing and mothering of their offspring, and he provides a compassionate piece dedicated to Hohenwald, Tennessee's Elephant Sanctuary, a humanitarian refuge for "old, sick, and abused elephants" where virtual visitors can enjoy and interact with the animals remotely via 14 mounted surveillance cameras. Intermittently fascinating, comprehensive reading on the giants of the big top and beyond.

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