Animal Biographies: Beyond Archetypal Figures.Violette Pouillard -2022 -Journal of Animal Ethics 12 (2):172-178.detailsThe biographies of animal celebrities published by the historians John Simons and Eric Baratay aim to place animals in and of themselves at the center of academic narratives. Both excavate the lived experiences concealed behind official discourses and collective representations, notably by relying on cross-fertilization with ethological research. They unveil the ways in which information was reshaped in order to portray animal celebrities as benevolent members of human-animal communities, and thereby shed light on the mechanics of animal commodification. The close (...) examination of a few individual animal trajectories enlightens the condition of many historical animals living under human tutelage in the 19th and early 20th century and highlights long-term historical evolutions, such as the succession of animal cultures and generations largely determined by human actions. (shrink)
Animal Feeding, Animal Experiments, and the Zoo as a Laboratory: Paris Ménagerie and London Zoo, ca. 1793–1939: The Zoo as a Laboratory. [REVIEW]Violette Pouillard -2022 -Centaurus 64 (3):705-728.detailsThis article elaborates a local history of zoo feeding practices in order to shed light on the construction of knowledge at the zoo, its intersection with laboratory developments in life sciences, and the nature of zoo sciences. It relies on the case studies of two of the oldest zoological gardens in the world-the Jardin des Plantes Ménagerie in Paris (1793) and the London Zoological Gardens (1828)-both of which formed parts of major scientific institutions, thereby facilitating research on the dialogue between (...) zoo knowledge and life sciences. The article argues that zoos developed around an experimental paradigm that consisted of testing on animals the (nutritional) variables of their survival within a highly constrained institutional framework. From the interwar period, the empirical nature of the zoo feeding economy was marked by slow and uneven changes, associated with the development of nutritional sciences as well as internal hygiene, pathology, and veterinary programmes. Despite transfers and networks of people, methods, experiments, concepts, and animals between zoos and life sciences laboratories, the former remained too impure as a research site to act as an extension of the latter. Zoos, however, needed external laboratories to support themselves with the scientific legitimacy that their “biopolitical modernisation” (Chrulew) required. In addressing programmatic changes as well as their impact upon the animals, this paper argues that trial-and-error experiments are constitutive of the zoo, contributing towards the definition of the nature of both zoo management and zoo sciences. (shrink)
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Vie et mort des gorilles de l’est en captivité.Violette Pouillard -2015 -Revue de Synthèse 136 (3-4):375-402.detailsL'évolution de l'approvisionnement des zoos en animaux est un aspect de l'histoire de ces institutions marginal dans les recherches bien que révélateur des relations entretenues avec la faune. Dans la lignée des récents développements de l'histoire des animaux, il est envisagé ici du côté des animaux et non des seuls humains. Une micro-histoire de la capture des gorilles de l'Est met en évidence les politiques humaines, leurs incidences sur les gorilles et leurs évolutions concomitantes aboutissant à la réduction des captures.
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