The wild within : histories of a landmark British zoo /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Flack, Andrew, 1980- author.
Imprint:Charlottesville : University of Virginia Press, 2018.
Description:1 online resource
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12282726
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780813940939
0813940931
9780813940953
0813940958
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed February 16, 2018).
Summary:Established in 1836, the Bristol Zoo is the world's oldest surviving zoo outside of a capital city and has frequently been at the vanguard of zoo innovation. InThe Wild Within, Andrew Flack uses the experiences of the Bristol Zoo to explore the complex and ever-changing relationship between human and beast, which in many cases has altered radically over time. Flack recounts a history in which categories and identities combined, converged, and came into conflict, as the animals at Bristol proved to be extremely adaptive. He also reveals aspects of the human-animal bond, however, that have remained remarkably consistent not only throughout the zoo's existence but for centuries, including the ways in which even the captive animals with the most distinct qualities and characteristics are misunderstood when viewed through an anthropocentric lens. Flack strips back the layers of the human-animal relationship from those rooted in objectification and homogenization to those rooted in the recognition of consciousness and individual experience. The multifaceted beasts and protean people inThe Wild Withinchallenge a host of assumptions--both within and outside the zoo--about what it means to be human or animal in the modern world. This short and appealingly illustrated book narrates the history of the Bristol Zoo (UK), one of the oldest zoos in the world and a pioneer in the animal conservation movement.--
Description
Summary:

Established in 1836, the Bristol Zoo is the world?s oldest surviving zoo outside of a capital city and has frequently been at the vanguard of zoo innovation. In The Wild Within , Andrew Flack uses the experiences of the Bristol Zoo to explore the complex and ever-changing relationship between human and beast, which in many cases has altered radically over time.

Flack recounts a history in which categories and identities combined, converged, and came into conflict, as the animals at Bristol proved to be extremely adaptive. He also reveals aspects of the human-animal bond, however, that have remained remarkably consistent not only throughout the zoo?s existence but for centuries, including the ways in which even the captive animals with the most distinct qualities and characteristics are misunderstood when viewed through an anthropocentric lens.

Flack strips back the layers of the human-animal relationship from those rooted in objectification and homogenization to those rooted in the recognition of consciousness and individual experience. The multifaceted beasts and protean people in The Wild Within challenge a host of assumptions--both within and outside the zoo--about what it means to be human or animal in the modern world.

Physical Description:1 online resource
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780813940939
0813940931
9780813940953
0813940958