Palace of Deception

Museum Men and the Rise of Scientific Racism

5 December 2025

Territory Rights — Worldwide.

Darrin Lunde (Author)

Description

An eye-opening look into the founding of the American Museum of Natural History and its original racial underpinnings

From 1908 to 1933, the American Museum of Natural History launched more scientific field expeditions than at any other time in its existence. Sponsoring trips to Africa and Central Asia, the museum filled its halls with artifacts and an aura of adventure, underwritten by some of New York City’s most prominent men. In Palace of Deception, Darrin Lunde uncovers the complicated legacy of three iconic figures of the American Museum: President Henry Fairfield Osborn, the preeminent explorer Roy Chapman Andrews and Carl Akeley, the pioneering taxidermist who created so many of the museum’s most memorable exhibits. Palace of Deception traces the racially infused milieu which sought to enshrine the prevailing social hierarchy and examines the simmering anxieties about human origins that were the backdrop to a golden age of exploration.

Hardback

9781324065678

152 x 229 mm • 276 pages

£23.00

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Ebook

9781324065685

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£21.50

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