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Author Hancocks, David, author.

Title Different Nature : The Paradoxical World of Zoos and Their Uncertain Future / David Hancocks; ed. by David Hancocks.

Published Berkeley, CA : University of California Press, [2001]
2001

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 UniM INTERNET Resource    AVAILABLE
Physical description 1 online resource (301 p.) : 37 b/w photographs, 1 line illustration
Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Collections as Status -- 2. The Eighteenth-Century Concept -- 3. The Nineteenth-Century Phenomenon -- 4. Romanticists and Modernists -- 5. Toward New Frontiers -- 6. Immersed in the Landscape -- 7. Agents of Conservation -- 8. Which Way the Future? -- 9. Epilogue -- Bibliography -- Index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-262).
Summary Humanity has had an enduring desire for close contact with exotic animals-from the Egyptian kings who kept thousands of animals, including monkeys, wild cats, hyenas, giraffes, and oryx, to the enormously popular zoological parks of today. This book, the most extensive history of zoos yet published, is a fascinating look at the origins, evolution, and-most importantly-the future of zoos. David Hancocks, an architect and zoo director for thirty years, is passionately opposed to the poor standards that have prevailed and still exist in many zoos. He reviews the history of zoos in light of their failures and successes and points the way toward a more humane approach, one that will benefit both the animals and the humans who visit them. This book, replete with illustrations and full of moving stories about wild animals in captivity, shows that we have only just begun to realize zoos' enormous potential for good. Hancocks singles out and discusses the better zoos, exploring such places as the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, the Bronx Zoo with its dedication to worldwide conservation programs, Emmen Zoo in Holland with its astonishingly diverse education programs, Wildscreen in England, and Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo, where the concept of "landscape immersion"-exhibits that surround people and animals in carefully replicated natural habitats-was pioneered. Calling for us to reinvent zoos, Hancocks advocates the creation of a new type of institution: one that reveals the interconnections among all living things and celebrates their beauty, inspires us to develop greater compassion for wild animals great and small, and elicits our support for preserving their wild habitats.
Language notes In English.
Other author Hancocks, David, editor.
Subject Zoos -- History.
History
ISBN 9780520353527
0520353528
0520218795 (cloth ; alk. paper)
9780520218796 (cloth ; alk. paper)
0520236769
9780520236769
Standard Number 10.1525/9780520353527