1 / 15

Zoos Of Berlin

Zoos Of Berlin. By Joseph Fry, Amy Ellice, Emily Ratty & Heather Mccrorie. The Parks - Joe. Berlin Zoological Garden (West Berlin) & Tierpark Berlin (East Berlin)

chesmu
Download Presentation

Zoos Of Berlin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Zoos Of Berlin By Joseph Fry, Amy Ellice, Emily Ratty & Heather Mccrorie

  2. The Parks - Joe Berlin Zoological Garden (West Berlin) & Tierpark Berlin (East Berlin) • Zoological Garden regarded as ‘one of the largest [zoos] in the world’ (berlin-life.com) yet ironically criticized for being too cramped at only (30 Hectares). • Tierpark has less animals, but spans over a greater expanse (160 hectares) • Popularity: Knut the polar bear and BaoBao the panda.

  3. The Parks 2.0 • Zoological Garden breeding successes.

  4. Black Rhino!

  5. Zoos: Natural or cultural? The big debate! • Zoos as ‘Urban Phenomenon’? (Mullan & Marvin, 1999, p68)

  6. Organisation • Partial Zoogeographic layout: some continental areas – south American/African, etc. • Types – Deer/antelope/zebra, etc. • Carnivore House • Penguin House • Aviaries • Glass Dome Hippo House • Siamese Cattle House – ‘Biggest Thai Building in Europe’. • Antelope House • Ape House • Aquarium Zoological Garden Tierpark

  7. Tours • Tour by Popularity • Tours by Continent • Etc

  8. Control & Power • Heyd • Control of animals: • Feeding (Zoo’s comment) – Respect • Power over life and death • Containment - Fences/Cages, etc • Control of people: • Paths – Numbered • Signs • Rules • No Dogs! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ61qi-Sptg&feature=fvw BLURRED BOUNDARIES!

  9. Knut the Polar Bear • The face of Berlin Zoological Garden • Consumerisation of animals - Amy • He has been seen in many forms of popular culture. These include story books, news reports, clothing, magazines, and more. BaoBao the Panda is also another big attraction, as one of the oldest Panda’s in a zoo to date.

  10. Animal Celebrities

  11. Realism - Joe • How ‘real’ are the habitats? • Made to mimic the original habitats of the animals in the wild: - Plants - Water - *Temperatures • Batty => Gardens => Zoos • Berger => ‘Framed’ animals. P7 “capacity for symbolic thought” – difference between humans and animals. • Zoos symbolise human perceptions of nature. • Berlin Zoo doesn’t always provide ‘realistic’ environments... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65EiIzDnHFM

  12. Questions • Are you pro/anti zoo’s? • Should animals be kept in zoos? Should they instead run ‘free’? • Are the animals better off in the wild? What about human medical care? (When people want nature to be left entirely natural should humans intervene when nature is in danger?) • Who benefits from controlling animals? Man or Beast? Both? • Is the popularity of Knut somewhat distasteful? • Should humans be allowed to come between animal and nature? It was even said that Knut had become addicted to humans and their company. Does this then resonate with animals in zoos being classed as pets? • Do we Personify animals? Do you think they feel sad about their predicaments?

  13. Biblio • http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/5142098/Woman-survives-polar-bear-mauling-at-Berlin-Zoo.html • Info: http://www.zoo-infos.de/set-en.html?/zoos-en/41.html &  http://www.berlin-life.com/berlin/zoo • Soper, K. (1995) What is nature?, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Ltd. • Heyd, T. (2007) Encountering Nature: Toward an Environmental Culture, Hampshire: Ashgate Pubishing Ltd. • Cudworth, E. (2003) Environment and Society, London: Routledge. • Berger, J. ( 2009) “Why look at animals?”, in About Looking, London: Bloomsbury. • Evernden, N. (1992) The Social Creation of Nature, London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. • Kalof, L and Fitzgerald, A. (2007) The Animals Reader, Oxford:Berg. • Malamud, R. (1998) Reading Zoo’s: Representations of animals and captivity, New York: New York University Press. • Serpell, J. (1986) In the company of animals: a study of Human – Animal Relationships, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Mullan & Marvin. (1999) Zoo Culture, Great Britain: George Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd. • http://www.berlin-life.com/berlin/zoo - Info • http://www.zoo-infos.de/set-en.html?/zoos-en/41.html - Info • http://www.zoo-berlin.de/ - Info • http://abcnews.go.com/Travel/zoos-world-giant-pandas/story?id=9249217&page=1 – Bao Bao • Tuan - http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8s-qq1CYjugC&pg=PA26&dq=tuan+1984&hl=en&ei=JU91Tam0Ho2JhQf5qrw2&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCkQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=tuan%201984&f=false

More Related