Contested Exhibitions: The Debate over Proper Animal Sights in Post-Revolutionary America

Author: Mizelle, Brett

Source: World Views: Global Religions, Culture, and Ecology, Volume 9, Number 2, 2005 , pp. 219-235(17)

Publisher: BRILL

Key:
Free Content - Free Content
New Content - New Content
Subscribed Content - Subscribed Content
Free Trial Content - Free Trial Content

Abstract:

Animal exhibitions served as a crucial site in which Americans struggled to come to terms with their post-revolutionary society. This essay analyzes those debates over proper ways of seeing animals in the early republic that reveal an emerging distinction between legitimate and problematic displays of animals, between exhibitions of exotic creatures that provided "instructive amusement" and those animal acts that did not. While this distinction was, in actuality, seldom clear, this effort to define what types of animal exhibitions were acceptable both reflected and helped to produce the modern divide between humans as subjects and animals as objects. It also reveals other significant transformations in American culture, including the segmentation of American audiences, the division of culture into high and low, and the place of ideas about animals in defining the citizen and the nation.

Keywords: ANIMALS; EXHIBITIONS; PUBLIC CULTURE; AUDIENCES; VISUALITY

Document Type: Regular paper

DOI: 10.1163/1568535054615367

The full text electronic article is available for purchase. You will be able to download the full text electronic article after payment.

$25.00 plus tax      Refund Policy

 

OR

Back to top

Key:
Free Content - Free Content
New Content - New Content
Subscribed Content - Subscribed Content
Free Trial Content - Free Trial Content
Share this item with others: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Page Help Click here for Page Help
Shopping cart
Tools
Sign in






Need to register?
Sign up here
Text size: A | A | A | A