Zoo studies : a new humanities / edited by Tracy McDonald and Daniel Vandersommers. - Montreal ; Kingston ; London ; Chicago : McGill-Queen's University Press, (c)2019. - 1 online resource (xiv, 345 pages) : illustrations.

Includes bibliographies and index.

Psychotic humans, psychotic animals: the zoo and the mental hospital, 1656-1794 / The Antelope collectors / Failed zoo experiments: primatology, aeronautics, and the animality of "Modern" science, 1891-1903 / Sculpting Dinah with the blunt tools of the historian / Stereoscopic animals: spectatorship, Kodiak Bears, and the Keystone Animal Set / "Try telling that to the Polar Bears": rationing and resistance at the wartime zoo / Gust (ca 1952-1988), or a history from below of the changing zoo / Child stars at the zoo: the rise and fall of Polar Bear Knut / Pandas and the reproduction of race and heterosexuality in the zoo / Flying penguins in Japan's northernmost zoo / Al Gore, Blackfish, and me: eco-activist progress and prospects for the future / Reorienting the space of containment, or from zoosphere to Noösphere and beyond / Zoomorphic bodies: moving and being moved by animals / Daniel Vandersommers and Tracy McDonald -- Matthew Senior -- Nigel Rothfels -- Daniel Vandersommers -- Tracy McDonald -- Zeb Tortorici -- John Kinder -- Violette Pouillard -- Guro Flinterud -- Marianna Szczygielska -- Takashi Ito -- Randy Malamud -- Ron Broglio -- Jonathan Osborn.

"Do both the zoo and the mental hospital induce psychosis, as humans are treated as animals and animals are treated as humans? How have we looked at animals in the past, and how do we look at them today? How have zoos presented themselves, and their purpose, over time? In response to the emergence of environmental and animal studies, anthropologists, sociologists, philosophers, theorists, literature scholars, and historians around the world have begun to explore the significance of zoological parks, past and present. Zoo Studies considers the modern zoo from a range of approaches and disciplines, united in a desire to blur the boundaries between human and nonhuman animals. The volume begins with an account of the first modern mental hospital, La Salpêtrière, established in 1656, and the first panoptical zoo, the menagerie at Versailles, created in 1662 by the same royal architect; the final chapter presents a choreographic performance that imagines the Toronto Zoo as a place where the human body can be inspired by animal bodies. From beginning to end, through interdisciplinary collaboration, this volume decentres the human subject and offers alternative ways of thinking about zoos and their inhabitants. This collection immerses readers in the lives of animals and their experiences of captivity and asks us to reflect on our own assumptions about both humans and animals. An original and groundbreaking work, Zoo Studies will change the way readers see nonhuman animals and themselves."--



9780773558168 9780773558151

20190065052 can


Zoos--Philosophy.
Zoos--Social aspects.
Zoos--Moral and ethical aspects.
Animals and civilization.
Human-animal relationships.
Humanities--Philosophy.


Electronic Books.

QL76 / .Z667 2019