This paper develops a cultural critique of the zoo as an institution that inscribes various human strategies for domesticating, mythologizing and aestheticizing the animal universe. Using the case of Adelaide, South Australia, the paper charts the mutable discursive frames and practices through which animals were fashioned and delivered to the South Australian public by the Royal Zoological Society of South Australia. The visual technologies at the Adelaide Zoo are documented from the time of menagerie-style caging in the late nineteenth century, through the era of the Fairground between the mid-1930s and the early 1960s, up to the contemporary era of naturalistic enclosures when exhibits such as the fanciful World of Primates continue to c...
The Ghanaian philosopher, Kwasi Wiredu described contemporary Africans as living ‘in a cultural flux...
The thesis exhibition Proximity to Animals critically explored the varying and complex proximity ani...
Nature conservation in southern Africa has always been characterised by an interplay between Capital...
Humans detain Other species in zoos for various publicly stated reasons. In this way, zoo captives a...
This paper will explore the tropical exotic in relation to the widespread European fascination with ...
Museums have been viewed as valuable education resources as well as sites of reproduction of colonia...
The history of public zoos as places that exhibit animals and actively shape the human-animal bond i...
The chapter aims to restore a balance in zoological garden studies, where animals paradoxically are ...
Fighting Nature is an insightful analysis of the historical legacy of 19th century colonialism, war,...
The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century. Starting off as a Western European pheno...
The exploration manifests in the idea of coexistence where indigenous animals, nature and people co...
The paper reviews recent literature in the field of animal geographies, a scholarship that reflects ...
Global History of Science Seminar (GHOSS)The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century....
People have captured, kept, and displayed wild animals for thousands of years, but zoological garden...
Anthropozoological displays—often associated more succinctly with the phenomenon of the ‘human zoo’—...
The Ghanaian philosopher, Kwasi Wiredu described contemporary Africans as living ‘in a cultural flux...
The thesis exhibition Proximity to Animals critically explored the varying and complex proximity ani...
Nature conservation in southern Africa has always been characterised by an interplay between Capital...
Humans detain Other species in zoos for various publicly stated reasons. In this way, zoo captives a...
This paper will explore the tropical exotic in relation to the widespread European fascination with ...
Museums have been viewed as valuable education resources as well as sites of reproduction of colonia...
The history of public zoos as places that exhibit animals and actively shape the human-animal bond i...
The chapter aims to restore a balance in zoological garden studies, where animals paradoxically are ...
Fighting Nature is an insightful analysis of the historical legacy of 19th century colonialism, war,...
The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century. Starting off as a Western European pheno...
The exploration manifests in the idea of coexistence where indigenous animals, nature and people co...
The paper reviews recent literature in the field of animal geographies, a scholarship that reflects ...
Global History of Science Seminar (GHOSS)The zoological garden is a child of the nineteenth century....
People have captured, kept, and displayed wild animals for thousands of years, but zoological garden...
Anthropozoological displays—often associated more succinctly with the phenomenon of the ‘human zoo’—...
The Ghanaian philosopher, Kwasi Wiredu described contemporary Africans as living ‘in a cultural flux...
The thesis exhibition Proximity to Animals critically explored the varying and complex proximity ani...
Nature conservation in southern Africa has always been characterised by an interplay between Capital...