The Bloody Keys: Ivory, Pianos, and the Hidden Cost of Colonial Exploitation

2025-03-25
The Bloody Keys: Ivory, Pianos, and the Hidden Cost of Colonial Exploitation

From the 17th century onward, the ivory trade became inextricably linked to Africa's economy and society. European demand fueled long-distance caravan trade and intensified exploitation. The rise of the piano made ivory a key component, boosting the trade and decimating elephant populations. Colonial rule in the 19th century exacerbated the brutality, enslaving Africans and forcing them into dangerous ivory transport. The US only halted ivory imports in 1988, marking a slow end to the trade. This history reveals the hidden suffering behind seemingly innocuous commodities, urging reflection on consumption patterns and the need for equitable global supply chains.

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Bridgerton and the Surprisingly Robust History of Regency-Era Sex Ed

2025-01-21
Bridgerton and the Surprisingly Robust History of Regency-Era Sex Ed

A scene in Netflix's Bridgerton season 3 sparked a discussion about female sex education in the 19th century. Historian and romance novelist Alexandra Vasti investigated, finding that while records of upper-class women's sex ed are scarce, popular novels, sex manuals like Aristotle's Masterpiece and Every Woman's Book, and sex worker memoirs reveal a surprising level of sexual knowledge among women. Vasti's novel, Ne'er Duke Well, features a fictional library secretly supplying women with sex education texts, highlighting the fight for access to sexual information. This contrasts sharply with current restrictions on sex education in some US states, illustrating the ongoing struggle for control over women's sexual knowledge, then and now.

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