![The Public Domain Review](/static/pdr-logo_2x-a9aa17abb46a7af84cd791867a6031ec.png)
P.T. Barnum
![Race and the White Elephant War of 1884](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/race-and-the-white-elephant-war-of-1884/37501044282_4186a01dd0_z.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Race and the White Elephant War of 1884
Feuding impresarios, a white-but-not-white-enough elephant, and racist ads for soap — Ross Bullen on how a bizarre episode in circus history became an unlikely forum for discussing 19th-century theories of race, and inadvertently laid bare the ideological constructions at their heart. more
![Circassian Beauty in the American Sideshow](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/circassian-beauties/circassian-beauty-feature.jpeg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Circassian Beauty in the American Sideshow
Among the “human curiosities” in P. T. Barnum’s American Museum was a supposed escapee from an Ottoman harem, a figure marketed as both the pinnacle of white beauty and an exoticised other. Betsy Golden Kellem investigates the complex of racial and cultural stereotypes that made the Circassian beauty such a sideshow spectacle. more
![Jumbo’s Ghost: Elephants and Machines in Motion](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/jumbos-ghost/jumbo-feature.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Jumbo’s Ghost: Elephants and Machines in Motion
On September 15, 1885, twenty-five years after his capture in Sudan, Jumbo the elephant tragically died when struck by a freight train. Ross Bullen takes us on a spectral journey through other collisions between elephant and machine — in adventure novels, abandoned roadside hotels, and psychic science — revealing latent anxieties at the century’s turn. more