A Wilder Kingdom: Rethinking Nature in Zoos, Wildlife Parks, and Beyond

A Wilder Kingdom: Rethinking Nature in Zoos, Wildlife Parks, and Beyond

A Wilder Kingdom: Rethinking Nature in Zoos, Wildlife Parks, and Beyond

A Wilder Kingdom: Rethinking Nature in Zoos, Wildlife Parks, and Beyond

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Overview

Zoos have always had a troubled relationship to what is considered the “real” wild. Even the most immersive and naturalistic zoos, critics maintain, are inherently contrived and inauthentic environments. Zoo animals’ diet, care, and reproduction are under pervasive human control, with natural phenomena like disease and death kept mostly hidden from public view. Furthermore, despite their growing commitment to conservation and education, zoos are entertainment providers that respond to visitors’ expectations and preferences. What would a “wilder” zoo—one that shows the public a wider range of ecological processes—look like? Is it achievable or even desirable? What roles can or should zoos play in encouraging humanity to find meaningful connections with wild animals and places?

A Wilder Kingdom is a provocative and reflective examination of the relationship between zoos and the wild. It gathers a premier set of multidisciplinary voices—from animal studies and psychology to evolutionary biology and environmental journalism—to consider the possibilities and challenges of making zoos wilder. In so doing, the contributors offer new insights into the future of the wild beyond zoos and our relationship to wild species and places across the landscape in an increasingly human-dominated era.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231201537
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 09/12/2023
Pages: 280
Sales rank: 514,187
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Ben A. Minteer is professor of environmental ethics and conservation in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University. His many books include Wild Visions: Wilderness as Image and Idea (2022); The Fall of the Wild: Extinction, De-Extinction, and the Ethics of Conservation (Columbia, 2018); and The Ark and Beyond: The Evolution of Zoo and Aquarium Conservation (2018).

Harry W. Greene is emeritus professor at Cornell University and adjunct professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the author of Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature (1997) and Tracks and Shadows: Field Biology as Art (2013).

Table of Contents

1. Zoos and the Wild: A Reconsideration, by Ben A. Minteer and Harry W. Greene
2. Between Worlds: A Conversation Among the Cranes, by Curt Meine
3. Animal Art and the Changing Meanings of the Wild, by Alison Hawthorne Deming
4. Can Zoos Connect People with Wildness?, by Susan Clayton
5. “Wild” Through an American Indian Historical Analysis, by Kelsey Dayle John and Reva Mariah ShieldChief
6. Toward a Wilder Kin-Dom: Why Zoos Must Focus More on Ecological Interactions (with Our Children and Other Biota) Than on Isolated Species, by Gary Paul Nabhan
7. This Is a Zoo? Reflections on a Wilder Zoo by Visitors to the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, by Debra Colodner, Craig Ivanyi, and Cassandra Lyon
8. Evolution to the Rescue: Natural Selection Can Help Captive Populations Adapt to a Changing World, by Jonathan B. Losos
9. Zoo Dogs, by Clive D. L. Wynne and Holly G. Molinaro
10. Zoo Time, by Nigel Rothfels
11. The Microbial Zoo: How Small Is Wild?, by Irus Braverman
12. A Home for the Wild: Architecture in the Zoo, by Natascha Meuser
13. Reconnecting Zoos to the Wild and Rethinking Dignity in Animal Conservation, by Joseph R. Mendelson III
14. Seeing the Wild in Zoos by Seeing the Humans Too, by Amanda Stronza
15. The Once and Future Rhino, by Michelle Nijhuis
Postscript: On Wildness and Responsibility, by Ben A. Minteer and Harry W. Greene
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Index
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