动物园里的谋杀、死亡和自杀:重游1936 - 1958年魁北克圈养北极熊的拟人化故事

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Canadian Historical Review Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.3138/chr-2022-0002
G. Colpitts
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引用次数: 0

摘要

20世纪30年代至50年代,两组北极熊成为魁北克Jardin动物园的明星景点,该动物园位于魁北克市郊区的查尔斯堡。在那里,北极熊的故事发生了变化,因为动物园公众的行为和期望发生了变化。但这些故事也是由这些熊一生的行为塑造的。本文以批判性拟人化为方法,借鉴动物园和野外对熊的研究,认为这些熊的情绪、情绪和行为受到它们的个性、围栏的性质、引入它们的新刺激、它们对动物园游客和饲养员的适应以及它们的衰老的影响。反过来,熊的故事很可能塑造了熊的人类感知。这些报道在报纸上转载,其中大部分在通讯社播出,受众非常多。熊的行为被解读、误解和拟人化的方式表明,在两次世界大战期间,尤其是在20世纪30年代的大萧条时期,随着加拿大南部城市人口将北极作为“第二边疆”,这些动物是如何获得公众兴趣的。
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Murder, Death, and Suicide at the Zoo: Revisiting Anthropomorphic Stories of Quebec’s Captive Polar Bears, 1936–58
Between the 1930s and 1950s, two cohorts of polar bears became star attractions at the Jardin zoologique du Québec, located in Charlesbourg on the outskirts of Quebec City. There, polar bear narratives changed because behaviours and expectations of the zoo’s public changed. But these stories were also shaped by the behaviours of these bears over their lifetimes. By using critical anthropomorphism as a method and drawing on studies of bears in zoos and in the wild, this article suggests that these bears’ moods, emotions, and behaviours were influenced by their individual personalities, the nature of their enclosures, the new stimuli introduced to them, their conditioning to zoo visitors and keepers, and their aging. Stories of the bears, in turn, likely shaped the bears’ human perception. Reproduced in newspaper coverage, much of it carried in wire services, these stories reached very large audiences. The way in which bear behaviours were interpreted, misinterpreted, and anthropomorphized suggests how the animals gained public interest as southern Canadian urban populations oriented themselves toward the Arctic as a “second frontier” in the interwar period, particularly during the Depression years of the 1930s.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
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0.00%
发文量
84
期刊介绍: Among the western nations that have played a substantive role in the making of twentieth-century history, Canada enjoys the questionable distinction of being perhaps the least known. Yet there are good reasons for everyone - Canadians included - to know more about Canada"s history. Good reasons that are apparent to regular readers of the Canadian Historical Review. The CHR offers an analysis of the ideas, people, and events that have molded Canadian society and institutions into their present state. Canada"s past is examined from a vast and multicultural perspective to provide a thorough assessment of all influences.
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