
In 1943, Fierce Aerial Bombardment Razed The Berlin Zoo And Killed Most Of Its Animals. But Only Two Months After The War's End, Berliners Had Already Resurrected It, Reopening Its Gates And Creating A Symbol Of Endurance In The Heart Of A Shattered City. As This Episode Shows, The Berlin Zoo Offers One Of The Most Unusual--yet Utterly Compelling--lenses Through Which To View German History. This Enormously Popular Attraction Closely Mirrored Each Of The Political Systems Under Which It Existed: The Authoritarian Monarchy Of The Kaiser, The Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, And The Post-1945 Democratic And Communist States. Gary Bruce Provides The First English-language History Of The Berlin Zoo, From Its Founding In 1844 Until The 1990 Unification Of The West Berlin And East Berlin Zoos. At The Center Of The Capital's Social Life, The Berlin Zoo Helped To Shape German Views Not Only Of The Animal World But Also Of The Human World For More Than 150 Years. Given Its Enormous Reach, The German Government Used The Zoo To Spread Its Political Message, From The Ethnographic Display Of Africans, Inuit, And Other Exotic Peoples In The Late Nineteenth Century To The Nazis' Bizarre Attempts To Breed Back Long-extinct European Cattle. By Exploring The Intersection Of Zoology, Politics, And Leisure, Bruce Shows Why The Berlin Zoo Was The Most Beloved Institution In Germany For So Long: It Allowed People To Dream Of Another Place, Far Away From An Often Grim Reality. It Is Not Purely Coincidence That The Profound Connection Of Berliners To Their Zoo Intensified Through The Bloody Twentieth Century. Its Exotic, Iconic Animals--including Rostom The Elephant, Knautschke The Hippo, And Evi The Sun Bear--seemed To Satisfy, Even Partially, A Longing For A Better, More Tranquil World.
This book investigates how the Berlin Zoo functioned as a mirror for German political and social evolution from its founding in 1844 through the 1990 reunification. Gary Bruce, a historian specializing in German history, utilizes archival records and institutional history to argue that the zoo served as a critical site for state propaganda, public leisure, and the projection of national identity across various regimes, including the Kaiserreich, the Weimar Republic, the Third Reich, and the divided post-war states.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as the first comprehensive English-language history of the institution, noting its success in linking animal display to broader societal shifts. Readers frequently highlight the author's ability to balance academic rigor with an accessible narrative regarding the zoo's survival through the destruction of the Second World War.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10:
0190234997
ISBN-13:
9780190234997
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