Peter Beard and his body of work only rang a vague bell in my readerly mind when I first met the results of one project he was part of in The Eyelids of Morning. I'm no closer to understanding what made him tick, even after reading The End of the Game--it's clear that he loved Africa, especially eastern Africa. It's also clear that he loved the thrill of the safari and the hunt for big game, and that in many ways he was a trophy hunter, even with his cameras. A trust fund playboy, a Peter Pan who saw Africa as "the greatest playground in history," an adventurer who got off on the adrenalin rush of danger--those are some of the strands that make up Peter Beard.
Beard is very clear that rich, mostly European, white men with guns changed Africa forever. In Zara's Tales (2004) he writes of an ethnic group called the Waliangulis, "For centuries these bow hunters lived, and lived well, among the elephants and rhinos. A natural order was established----coexistence--symbiosis! They were all surviving nicely, in balance until the white man came along to 'save them.'" (p. 58) Right he is. But . . . on the flip side Beard seems to romanticize these adventurers, coming to Africa for big game, big safaris, high adventure. What they did is well documented in this book.
So is the horrible mismanagement of Tsavo Wilderness Park, in which thousands and thousands of elephants starved to death. Beard's photographs bear witness to that terrible event, and the ensuing destruction of the environment. This terrible mismanagement of wildlife--what a dreadful foundation from which to develop plans to maintain a sustainable environment for these great beasts, whether the elephant or the rhino or the great ape . . . well you can see where I'm going with that one.
(Obviously, my sensibilities have been disturbed by Peter Beard's flamboyance and love of a wild fracas. I've perused a number of books about the safari in Africa, and thought the book written by Bartle Bull and titled Safari (of course!) provided good history and further insight into big game trophy hunters and the safari through time. Beard is mentioned once, and of course it's around a ruckus during a dangerous photo shoot.)