
This event is part of a live, online lunchtime seminar series. These stories allowed colonised peoples to be firmly placed in a lower rank of development while offering metropolitan audiences the gratifying power fantasy of ‘playing god’.īrian Wallace was an Early Career Visiting Fellow at the John Rylands Research Institute in 2018/19 and is now a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow working on his project 'God from Machines: Techonology and Magic in Nineteenth Century Imperial Encounters' at the Institute. Exaggerated accounts of ‘superstitious natives’ terrified by the ‘magic’ of rifles, fireworks, batteries, and even false teeth became a recurring trope in African travel narratives and fictional adventure stories like Jules Verne’s Five Weeks in a Balloon. Leverhulme Early Career Fellow Brian Wallace will discuss how the expeditions of imperial agents like Stanley gave rise to self-aggrandising stories of newly-contacted African peoples mistaking Western technologies for sorcery. Donna Sherman, curator of map collections at University of Manchester, will provide a brief history of the Society, its impact on teaching at the university, and its connections with the explorer Henry Morton Stanley.īut these maps tell another story too. The Society was founded by Manchester-based businessmen in the late 19th century its aim was to promote the study of Geographical Science especially in relation to 'commerce and civilisation'. The maps we will examine today originate from a collection amassed by the Manchester Geographical Society which comprises books, atlases, lantern slides, and maps.


In this lunchtime seminar we will be uncovering two contrasting sides of Victorian exploration – the scientific efforts to map uncharted regions of Africa for commercial and political gain, and the popular ‘techno-magical’ narratives of unfamiliar technologies being mistaken for magic which grew up around these expeditions.
