Anthropology and Cryptozoology: Exploring Encounters with Mysterious Creatures
Hurn, Samantha (editor) (2016: Routledge, 263pp.)
This is a rare academic tome on cryptozoology and a very
useful book indeed. There's a lot in here, most based on years of fieldwork,
about how different cultures see cryptids and how cryptozoology interacts with
anthropology and other fields of study. The authors take cryptozoology
seriously, with some praising Bernard Heuvelmans for his work defining the
field. There's some jargon ("…the processes of becoming that are
co-created through ingestive relationships...") but most of it's
accessible. Subjects include the hairy "bush dwarves" of Africa and the
Zanzibar leopard (Authors Martin Walsh and Helle Goldman held out a slim hope
for the "extinct" population two years before it was caught on
videotape. They also recorded there were 21 names in Swahili for leopards or
leopardlike animals in the area).
There's a very thorough dissection of a cat reported from the famed
island of Flores, which includes notes on the enigmatic “little people,” the ebu
gogo, and the fact local people showed scientists the Komodo dragon lived
in areas where it had never been officially recorded. Also included are several
broader discussions of cryptozoology and the zone between the physical and the
mythical. Does cryptozoology include physical animals only (my view) or does it
include those which are factual to certain cultures even though they'll never
be caught? Finally, it's superbly
referenced.