A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States

This project explores the influence of public opinion on the development and evolution of zoos and animal exhibits. The main focus will be on the “Big Four” - four oldest accredited zoos in the United States: Philadelphia Zoo, Central Park Zoo in NYC, Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, and Roger Williams...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee
Other Authors: Ricker, James C., Denning, Robert, McConnell, Stephanie
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Southern New Hampshire University 2023
Subjects:
Zoo
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10474/3745
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spelling ftsnhuniv:oai:academicarchive.snhu.edu:10474/3745 2023-09-05T13:22:22+02:00 A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee Ricker, James C. Denning, Robert McConnell, Stephanie 2023-06-23 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10474/3745 en_US eng Southern New Hampshire University https://hdl.handle.net/10474/3745 Author retains all ownership rights. Further reproduction in violation of copyright is prohibited. Climate Change Exhibit Public Opinion Environmental Studies Cultural Anthropology History Elephant Orca Zoo Thesis 2023 ftsnhuniv 2023-08-14T17:58:32Z This project explores the influence of public opinion on the development and evolution of zoos and animal exhibits. The main focus will be on the “Big Four” - four oldest accredited zoos in the United States: Philadelphia Zoo, Central Park Zoo in NYC, Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, and Roger Williams Park Zoo in Rhode Island. Four animal species will be examined to study zoo and exhibit development since the end of the Civil War in 1865. The animal species are elephants, orcas, red wolves, and timber rattlesnakes. These animal species provide historic examples of positive and negative animal care and species outcomes within captivity. Additionally, zoo and exhibit development progress will be supported with evidence directly from numerous zookeepers’ personal experiences, detailed Keepers Corner in the digital exhibition. This project acknowledges that scientific and medical advancements have lent significant changes to current zoo missions and exhibit design, yet research points to public opinions about animal welfare having historically been the driving factor. The primary sources used are news articles, photographs, and personal testimonials. Secondary sources include journal articles, books, and dissertations. Source categories found focus on cultural, social and political lenses, while acknowledging that other lenses are present in the research but addressing source categories from the particular focal lenses. Master Arts History College of Online and Continuing Education Thesis Orca Southern New Hampshire University: SNHU Academic Archive Lent ENVELOPE(-66.783,-66.783,-66.867,-66.867)
institution Open Polar
collection Southern New Hampshire University: SNHU Academic Archive
op_collection_id ftsnhuniv
language English
topic Climate Change
Exhibit
Public Opinion
Environmental Studies
Cultural Anthropology
History
Elephant
Orca
Zoo
spellingShingle Climate Change
Exhibit
Public Opinion
Environmental Studies
Cultural Anthropology
History
Elephant
Orca
Zoo
Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee
A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
topic_facet Climate Change
Exhibit
Public Opinion
Environmental Studies
Cultural Anthropology
History
Elephant
Orca
Zoo
description This project explores the influence of public opinion on the development and evolution of zoos and animal exhibits. The main focus will be on the “Big Four” - four oldest accredited zoos in the United States: Philadelphia Zoo, Central Park Zoo in NYC, Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago, and Roger Williams Park Zoo in Rhode Island. Four animal species will be examined to study zoo and exhibit development since the end of the Civil War in 1865. The animal species are elephants, orcas, red wolves, and timber rattlesnakes. These animal species provide historic examples of positive and negative animal care and species outcomes within captivity. Additionally, zoo and exhibit development progress will be supported with evidence directly from numerous zookeepers’ personal experiences, detailed Keepers Corner in the digital exhibition. This project acknowledges that scientific and medical advancements have lent significant changes to current zoo missions and exhibit design, yet research points to public opinions about animal welfare having historically been the driving factor. The primary sources used are news articles, photographs, and personal testimonials. Secondary sources include journal articles, books, and dissertations. Source categories found focus on cultural, social and political lenses, while acknowledging that other lenses are present in the research but addressing source categories from the particular focal lenses. Master Arts History College of Online and Continuing Education
author2 Ricker, James C.
Denning, Robert
McConnell, Stephanie
format Thesis
author Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee
author_facet Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee
author_sort Hopkins, Jocelyn Renee
title A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
title_short A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
title_full A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
title_fullStr A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
title_full_unstemmed A Digital Exhibition on Zoo Exhibits in the United States: The Impact of Public Opinion on Post-Civil War Zoo and Animal Exhibit Development Within the United States
title_sort digital exhibition on zoo exhibits in the united states: the impact of public opinion on post-civil war zoo and animal exhibit development within the united states
publisher Southern New Hampshire University
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10474/3745
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.783,-66.783,-66.867,-66.867)
geographic Lent
geographic_facet Lent
genre Orca
genre_facet Orca
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10474/3745
op_rights Author retains all ownership rights. Further reproduction in violation of copyright is prohibited.
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