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Trying Leviathan: The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature [Hardcover]

D. Graham Burnett
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 22, 2007 0691129509 978-0691129501

In Moby-Dick, Ishmael declares, "Be it known that, waiving all argument, I take the good old fashioned ground that a whale is a fish, and call upon holy Jonah to back me." Few readers today know just how much argument Ishmael is waiving aside. In fact, Melville's antihero here takes sides in one of the great controversies of the early nineteenth century--one that ultimately had to be resolved in the courts of New York City. In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett recovers the strange story of Maurice v. Judd, an 1818 trial that pitted the new sciences of taxonomy against the then-popular--and biblically sanctioned--view that the whale was a fish. The immediate dispute was mundane: whether whale oil was fish oil and therefore subject to state inspection. But the trial fueled a sensational public debate in which nothing less than the order of nature--and how we know it--was at stake. Burnett vividly recreates the trial, during which a parade of experts--pea-coated whalemen, pompous philosophers, Jacobin lawyers--took the witness stand, brandishing books, drawings, and anatomical reports, and telling tall tales from whaling voyages. Falling in the middle of the century between Linnaeus and Darwin, the trial dramatized a revolutionary period that saw radical transformations in the understanding of the natural world. Out went comfortable biblical categories, and in came new sorting methods based on the minutiae of interior anatomy--and louche details about the sexual behaviors of God's creatures.

When leviathan breached in New York in 1818, this strange beast churned both the natural and social orders--and not everyone would survive.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Trying Leviathan isn't just another fish story....[H]is story is riveting, one of those wonderful obscure microcosmic matters. -- Sam Roberts, New York Times

It's science itself that was put on trial in 1818 in a dispute over a $75 inspection fee, as related in this fascinating account...Burnett's look at the trial and its fallout adds a historical dimension to debates caused by science's role in the legal sphere, especially when it introduces new concepts. -- "Publishers Weekly

In 1818, in a New York City courtroom, the case of Maurice v. Judd posed an apparently straightforward question: Was whale oil fish oil, and therefore subject to state inspection and taxation? As expert witnesses testified, however, the trial quickly became a passionate public debate on the order of nature and the supremacy of man. In the fascinating Trying Leviathan: The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature, D. Graham Burnett describes the trial, its undercurrents, and its repercussions with sublime wit and consummate skill. -- Anna Mundow, The Boston Globe

At once bewitching and bookish, with a Dickensian cast of characters (including a sea captain named Preserved Fish), Trying Leviathan bristles with insights about the relationships between popular belief, democracy, science and the law that resonate with contemporary controversies over Darwinism and intelligent design. -- Glenn C. Altschuler, New York Observer

When the Catholic Church put Galileo on trial for his heretic views, man's position in the Universe was at stake. When schoolteacher John Scopes entered a Tennessee courtroom in 1925 for violating the state's anti-evolution statute, the issue was man's relationship to the animal kingdom. It's hard to imagine that a case brought by a Manhattan fish-oil inspector against a purveyor of whale oil could end up in similar territory. As D. Graham Burnett's enthralling book demonstrates, it did just that...Burnett curates the abundant quotations with skill and strengthens his thesis with some marvellous contemporary illustrations. His clear writing and delightful detours help build a sense of suspense at the outcome of the trial. All of which makes this serious book an unexpected page-turner. -- Henry Nicholls, Nature

...[Burnett's] perspective on the intellectual and social climate of early-nineteenth-century America makes fascinating reading. The issues raised in Maurice v. Judd have surfaced again and again, right up to present-day battles over the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. -- "Natural History

In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett links the case of Maurice v. Judd to a number of important cultural and social issues, but he consciously avoids depicting the story as a battle between learned men of science and the ignorant masses. Instead, he uses the trial as an epistemological exercise: how could Americans know at the time that whales were not fish? Who had the authority to make such a classification? How does scientific knowledge become conventional wisdom? Burnett's examination of these questions makes for one of the most intellectually rigorous fish stories ever told. -- "American Scientist

As D. Graham Burnett notes in his curious new history, Trying Leviathan, ...[t]he vast majority of American not only assumed that a whale was a fish, but were surprised to learn that the question could be debated. ...Burnett describes the trial with the keen eye of an informed courtroom observer... -- Alexander Nazaryan, The Village Voice

In taking Maurice v. Judd and fleshing out the details of the economics, natural history and politics of the day, Burnett offers a fascinating look into the early culture of science. We in the enlightened 21st century may laugh at the scientific ignorance of our forebears. But consider the debate about science in our times when many doubt the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution, climate change and the age of the Earth. -- David B. Williams, Seattle Times

Is the whale a fish? This seemingly arcane question was at stake in the 1819 New York court case Maurice v. Judd. If the whale was not a fish, its oil would not be subject to the same taxation. But as D. Graham Burnett entertainingly and ably demonstrates, this case was about far more than tax. It turned on questions of taxonomy and classification, giving the scholar insight into the ways the new science of comparative anatomy worked in the public and legal imagination...Burnett's micro-history of the trial offers a careful archaeological study, probing both vested business interests and the relationship between the law and the academy. -- Jerome de Groot, Financial Times

What makes this case so important, the author argues, is that it serves as a vehicle for investigating whales as 'problems of knowledge,' offers a window on the often contentious world of taxonomy, and reveals how the 19th-century public viewed natural history. -- "Science News

Burnett has a lot of fun with the trial and notes that it's not only scientists who speak a foreign language. -- Roger Gathman, Austin American Statesman

In Trying Leviathan, D. Graham Burnett provides an account that enlivens further this already energetic historiography. The empirical meat of the book involves a detailed and well-organized reconstruction of the trial of James Maurice (inspector of 'fish oils') versus Samuel Judd (chandler), which was brought before the New York Court of Common Pleas in October 1818. -- Diarmid Finnegan, H-Net Reviews

Burnett's book is a spectacular success . . . and he should be proud of it as such. For those with an antiquarian's taste there are many delicacies to be found in Trying Leviathan. -- Daniel Stewart, International Journal of Maritime History

Trying Leviathan is a truly splendid book. The book is well-written and entirely intelligible to a lay audience. -- Roderick Munday, Justice of the Peace

The book is well organized and fully documented. Burnett's many notes suggest significant research. It will be attractive to historians of many different topics, or sub-fields, which the author explores with much creativity. . . . An extensive bibliography and a generously organized index complete this book. It is a very important contribution to the relationship between science and society in the early years of American nation-building and nationalism. -- Ubiriatan D'Ambrosio, The Pacific Circle

Throughout this brief book, Burnett does a wonderful job re-creating the trial and the trial atmosphere. . . . Trying Leviathan is explicated so clearly that no reader will come away empty-handed. . . . This is a book with broad appeal. -- George O'Har, Technology and Culture

Burnett has given us a splendid example of how to wring the historical juice from a legal case. . . . Burnett enjoys himself in writing this book, and his editors have generously indulged his style (and his footnotes). Readers should settle back and roll with the flourishes, rather than yearn for the sparse, utilitarian narrative of a whaler's log. -- Katharine Anderson, Left History

Burnett offers readers a fascinating episode in the history of early American science, along the way raising questions about both the authority of professional naturalists and the historiography of modern (and especially American) science. -- Kristin Johnson, British Journal for the History of Science

[Trying Leviathan] has valuable lessons for us. It is also a terrific read. -- Arthur M. Shapiro, Reports of the National Center for Science Education

From the Inside Flap

"Graham Burnett's pathbreaking book teems with lively accounts of a notorious legal conflict between different kinds of people and different kinds of knowledge played out in New York in the early years of the nineteenth century. Disputes like these vividly illuminate the preoccupations of past societies and make us more conscious of our own. An important and thoroughly engaging book."--Janet Browne, author of Charles Darwin: The Power of Place

"'Is a whale a fish?' Melville famously wrestled with the question in Moby-Dick, but as Graham Burnett reveals in Trying Leviathan, the question had already been argued in--of all places--a Manhattan courtroom in 1818. In addition to providing a fascinating and provocative look at the relationship between science and culture in early nineteenth-century New York, Burnett writes eloquently about how the whalemen regarded their mysterious and awe-inspiring prey. This is a fun, surprising, and, in the best sense, challenging book."--Nathaniel Philbrick, author of In the Heart of the Sea

"Trying Leviathan recounts a remarkable collision of science and law in a New York City courtroom in 1818. Burnett brilliantly parses the case both inside and outside the court, exploring the conflicts it aroused between learned taxonomists and sea-leathered whalers, practical businessmen and everyday citizens. A compelling, provocative work."--Daniel Kevles, Yale University

"In this irresistible narrative, full of fascinating characters, Graham Burnett has given us a brilliant, imaginative, often amusing, wonderfully realized study that brings together questions of epistemology, the relation of observation to theory, the era's worship of nature and simultaneous commercial exploitation of it, claims of class to intellectual authority, and the relation of expertise to democracy."--Thomas Bender, New York University

"I can't remember reading a more intelligent and well-written book than Graham Burnett's Trying Leviathan. He is a brilliant writer, and he has transformed a nineteenth-century legal battle over the taxonomic classification of whales into a wonderful and engaging book."--Richard Ellis, author of Men and Whales

"Burnett shows the conflicted heart of nineteenth-century American science by looking at the complicated, amusing, and well-publicized trial of Maurice v. Judd, in which the question at stake was whether a whale is a fish. This makes a fascinating story, Burnett writes uncommonly well, and the final chapter is one of the most interesting pieces on popular science that I have ever read. Trying Leviathan is a powerful and brilliant addition to the history of American science and culture."--James Gilbert, University of Maryland


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (October 22, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691129509
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691129501
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.9 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,139,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Whale of a Tale (sorry, couldn't resist the pun) December 28, 2007
Format:Hardcover
Graham Burnett has taken an obscure 19th century court case (Maurice v. Judd) and evaluated the case in an unusual light - not on the technical merits of the case but on something much more expansive.

The premise of the case was that a merchant in 19th century New York, Samuel Judd, was fined by the fish oil inspector (Maurice) for having 3 kegs of uninspected whale oil. Judd proclaimed that the oil was not subject to inspection under the law because it was from a whale, not a fish. The technical merits of the case were simply to determine whether or not the whale oil was subject to the law and thus obliged to be inspected. Burnett, however, has evaluated scientific knowledge in the 19th century to determine whether or not the law was created in conformance with contemporary understandings of whether or not a whale was a fish or not.

Starting with biblical interpretations, and proceeding through the understandings of "common" New Yorkers, evaluations of natural historians, and seamen, Burnett demonstrates that this case did indeed demonstrate that the standard understanding in 19th century New York was, despite some views to the contrary, that a whale was indeed a fish.

The book is well written and quite enjoyable. The only reason I gave the book 4 stars instead of 5 is because of the epilogue/conclusion - I felt that they did not flow nearly as well with the standard subject matter as the rest of the book. I consider this to be more of a scientific history crossed with an intellectual history of a group of people - a fascinating approach and quite a diversion from the standard histories of the period.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Putting The Whale in Its Place December 25, 2007
Format:Hardcover
Just as schoolchildren now so easily learn that the Earth goes around the Sun, they easily learn that whales are not fish but air-breathing mammals. So it all seems so obvious, except that everything that lived in the sea was for millennia obviously a fish, and it took a while for us to get the classification right. When we did get it right, let's say starting with the 1758 classification system published by Carl Linnaeus, we didn't all get it right immediately, and it took a while for our education system to catch up. It also took a while for our legal system to do so. In _Trying Leviathan: The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature_ (Princeton University Press), historian D. Graham Burnett has brought back a legal battle that some might regard as fully worthy of being forgotten. After all, it had to do with the classification of whale oil, an important article of trade at the time of the 1818 trial, but not at all part of our world today. Nonetheless, the trial at the time was a sensation which interested New Yorkers not just over financial issues. It was a confrontation over natural history between the type of folk taxonomy people found in the Bible and the then-controversial scientific classification proposed by biologists. Although Burnett is not writing for the purpose of comparison with current events, readers will be reminded of the current clashes between Biblical literalists and scientific instruction; and if you regard scientists as the good guys, in this case, the good guys didn't win.

Whales were extraordinary creatures, to be sure, but for most people, even whalemen, they remained fish. Burnett says "the Genesical division of animals into those that fly, those that swim, and those that creep was pervasive and tenacious." One of the lawyers in the trial covered in this book indeed said, "We shall rely on the sacred volume as conclusive." Scientific taxonomic systems were subject to change and rearrangement; this is, we know, one of the strengths of science, to change models when more data become available, but during the trial, lawyers were able to make such rearrangements seem arbitrary or capricious, while the Bible's taxonomy was eternal. The trial, _Maurice v. Judd_, was based on the question of whether whale oil was fish oil. There was a New York state inspector of fish oils, the plaintiff James Maurice, who was quite interested in inspecting (and being paid for inspecting) barrels of whale oil, and Samuel Judd who dealt in spermaceti oil who did not want to pay for such testing. The star witness, physician and professor of natural history Samuel Latham Mitchill. When he declared, "As a man of science, I can say positively, that a whale is no more a fish than a man," he was calling upon ideas that would be more fully examined thirty years later with the publication of _On the Origin of Species_, and hinting that there was no sacred gap between animals and humans. Lawyers who cross-examined him challenged the elevation of whales to some sort of kinship with humans. Since this was a time when New York was considering extending citizenship to former slaves, Mitchill was twitted with the question of whether biologically an "orang outang" was close enough to us to be considered a freeman and given the vote. Poor Mitchill, who was deeply interested in advancing science and making New York a center for scientific thought, became a laughingstock, a target of satires in poetry reprinted by one newspaper after another long after the trial was over.

The jury deliberated for all of a quarter hour before announcing a verdict for Maurice, the inspector of fish oils. In the eyes of the court, the whale counted as a fish, but the New York legislature within a month deliberately exempted whale oil from inspection. Thus ended the matter under consideration for the trial, which played its role in the eventual acceptance of scientific taxonomy. _Trying Leviathan_, though, is about far more than just how the trial turned out or whether whales are fish. Definitions regarding an altogether scientific issue had to jostle with popular belief and democracy as well as economic interests. Burnett reminds us in a volume that shows admirably broad research and clear writing that this sort of trial drama, "the one that pitches society against science (or vice versa)", is a drama that always draws a crowd, "from Galileo's travails to those of Lysenko, from Scopes to intelligent design." It is one way that the order of nature gets encompassed into the order of popular and legal thought.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Taxonomy in unlikely places August 14, 2008
Format:Hardcover
In 2008, on a hike to History Rock in Hyalite Canyon just south of Bozeman, Montana, I noticed a rock in the trail. I said to my friend who was with me that the shape of it looked like a whale, and she replied that it could also look like a fish. I thought that little exchange ironic considering that I was near finishing D. Graham Burnett's _Trying Leviathan_ (Princeton, 2007), a book that revolves around a historical investigation of the question, "Is a Whale a Fish?" It took me a while to read this interesting (but densely erudite!) book - mostly 10 to 15 minutes during my lunch break everyday working at my campus library. If given the time, however, I probably could have polished it off in a few weeks, but time is always limited, and I am not as prolific a reader as I would like to be. So, that said, I am happy to finally post my review of Burnett's book about _The Nineteenth-Century New York Court Case That Put the Whale on Trial and Challenged the Order of Nature_ (this is its subtitle).

In _Trying Leviathan_, Burnett, a historian of science at Princeton University and author of _Masters of All They Surveyed: Exploration, Geography, and a British El Dorado_ (UCP, 2000), explores a little known New York trial from 1818, _Maurice v. Judd_, in which a fish oil inspector (James Maurice) brought a candle maker and oil merchant (Samuel Judd) to court over his refusal to pay fees on whale oil (a law stated that fish oil had to be inspected for quality and purity). Maurice was represented by lawyers William Sampson and John Anthon, who desired to keep the trial about commercial regulation and away from, in Burnett's words, the "muddy matters of taxonomy" (p. 17). Judd, whose defense included the testimony of the well-respected New York naturalist Samuel Mitchell, was represented by Robert Bogardus and William M. Price, who thought differently - they saw this as a taxonomic issue, and were willing to get dirty in the muddy matters (this case is also mentioned in the endnotes of Eric Jay Dolin's _Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America_ (W.W. Norton, 2007), pp. 384-385). What results is a splendid examination of questions about taxonomic systems, epistemology of natural historical knowledge, semantics, literary references, authority of various classes of New York citizens, and the relationship between science and society. Although the trial centers on the question of whether whale oil is fish oil, and hence if whales are fish, Burnett strives to look deeper into the reasons why the trial came to court at all, and what it meant beyond the straight science of taxonomy; he writes in his introduction: "It is perhaps cliché to assert that all taxonomy is politics, or to insist that epistemological problems are always problems of social order; _Maurice v. Judd_ provides a striking occasion to test the viability (as well as the limits) of such sweeping claims" (p. 10).

Burnett organizes his book around three reasons why this case is important to study: the status of "philosophy" and natural history in learned institutions and intellectual culture of New York in the first quarter of the nineteenth century; the importance of whales and other cetaceans that were considered "problems of knowledge" to this period of history in the United States; and the shaky status of zoological classification, surely not one of a "golden age of the classifying imagination" (I do think I should fully read Harriet Ritvo's _The Platypus and the Mermaid, and Other Figments of the Classifying Imagination_ (Harvard UP, 1997) - I read the first chapter for an animal histories course in 2005). These considerations, and the trial's main question in general (is a whale a fish?), are investigated by chapters devoted to what different categories of people in New York did or did not know about whales: naturalists, sailors and whalemen, artisans, merchants, and dealers in whale products, and regular folk of New York. While Mitchell thought it important to understand the authority of the first three, Sampson added the last category, considering the opinion of everyday citizens as worthy of attention.

The everyday citizens are tackled first, with Burnett concluding that a majority of people - whose limited contact with whales (textually or physically) included the authority of the Bible and its tripartite taxonomy (fish/water, beasts/earth, and birds/sky), popular natural history texts, the occasional strandings or moorings of whales, and the whale jaw bone of Scudder's American Museum - thought of whales as fish, and it was hard to stomach that whales could be in the same category (mammals) as humans. Whales seemed to sit outside of natural history, more as curiosities than as creatures which could be easily classified. Peculiar examples of animals pointed to exceptions to the rule of classification, which damaged the authority of the new philosophy of taxonomy, brought forth mainly by the comparative anatomy of Cuvier (as being different from the Linnean-style categorization of plants or animals based on external characteristics).

Yet the naturalists, "those who philosophize," would make the case that whales are indeed mammals, the subject of Burnett's third chapter. Anthon, who represented the oil inspector, stated to the jurors: "Many of us may not have seen a whale," but this should not cause us to be "led astray by the learning of philosophers" (p. 41). At issue was the authority of the naturalist and ichthyologist Samuel Mitchell, author of "The Fishes of New-York" and star witness of the defense, and in the long run, the authority of the enterprise of science itself. If common sense tells regular citizens of New York that whales are fish (for the Bible says so, and they swim in water like fish), then on what grounds should a naturalist's erudition and, maybe, mere opinion, tell them otherwise? Since taxonomy was brought to the forefront in the case, the prosecutors sought to show that the current state of taxonomy is in question, and that there is disagreement between the learned.

Not only did Mitchell represent the "new philosophy" of classification based on comparative anatomy, but he had big ideas about a program for a patriotic, American natural history, to make New York a scientific center by popularizing the city's natural history collections and promoting natural history to its citizens through lectures. And it was to this up and coming natural history and scientific culture that Maurice v. Judd may have owed its time in court: "through the trial flowed the strong currents of opposition to the institutions, innovations, and schemes of state-sponsored `philosophy.' Science in the service of the state looked to many New Yorkers suspiciously like the state in the service of the men of science" (p. 207), while there existed an "emerging cultural and intellectual ambitions of a rising community of artisans and merchants, who were seeking support for their own institutions for the advancement of learning" (p. 203). _Maurice v. Judd_ was more about social order in New York than it was about figuring out what a particular type of creature was (such that Burnett could have titled his book _Trying Natural History_, or _Trying Mitchell_, but _Trying Leviathan_ sounds better).

In Jules Verne's _Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea_ (1869), the naturalist Pierre Aronnax, with his apprentice Counsel, and the harpoonist Ned Land at times disagreed over not only their fate aboard Nemo's Nautilus, but also matters of life in the sea; and while Aronnax showed erudition as to the species of plants and birds (expert knowledge), Ned Land knew how to capture and prepare them for eating (practical knowledge). Naturalists and whalemen had different ways of looking at whales, and in the fourth chapter of _Trying Leviathan_, Burnett investigates what whalemen knew about their prey. Two whalemen were witnesses in the trial - one believed whales were not fish, noting similarities with humans, and the other did, until the trial caused him to possibly think otherwise. Whalers combined physical experience with whales with texts that discussed natural history of marine mammals, which may or may not have contrasted with the views of "cabinet naturalists." Burnett uses the logs and journals of whalemen to understand how they understood cetaceans. One way whalers thought of whales was in terms of oil; they were not solely animals, but instead storehouses of a money-making product. But they also thought of whales in terms of zoology. Important to Burnett's look into the whaleman's natural history is their cutting-in patterns, diagrams which depicted the methods by which a whale would be cut up, a "high-seas butchery," in which different whales necessitated different cutting-in operations due to different anatomies - anatomies different from those of naturalists, an "autonomous domain of natural knowledge" (p. 118). I like Burnett's observation that a harpoon or shaft is just as much a pointer to anatomical detail as it is a whaler's fatal tool. But he is quick to note that such anatomical detail represented for whalemen only a "superficial anatomy," because whalemen learned the anatomy useful to their purpose (whale oil was found in areas near the outer layer, or "blanket," of the animal), while naturalists learned as much as they could to have as complete a picture of nature as possible. With whales referred to as fish in logbooks, whalers not considering some whales to be "whales" (semantics), and whales as whales in the water yet fish if out of water, I take it that whalers generally considered their catch as fish.

In the fifth chapter, Burnett discusses the last group worth studying, those involved in the whale product industries (mainly oil), the "men of affairs. Read more ›
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