Animals

"Cavemen" in Cages Do Nothing to Help Zoos' Real Captives

Published November 29, 2009 @ 10:13AM PT

In August, I expressed frustrations with the concept of zoos in the post "'On Display' at the Zoo." One of my points was that until zoos start keeping humans from dwindling and dying cultures on display in small spaces behind glass walls in full view of their fellow humans, as part of an educational effort to get other humans to stop encroaching on their land, resources, and culture, I don't want to hear about how zoos are merely "educational" and not exploitative. Show me an "exhibit," I said, where one human has her hand up against the glass, looking out from her boxed-in life at a whole crowd of fellow humans, longing to be free like them, free to come and go and choose her surroundings and companions as she pleases -- and then we'll debate whether zoos' appeal to curious, paying people justifies the captivity and displaying of the zoos' inhabitants.

And because I'd already gone down this road mentally, I was all the more offended and angry to see what the Warsaw Zoo is up to and how it's putting an illogical, unrealistic spin on a similar concept and making light of what the animals we put on display in zoos endure. The Polish zoo has brought in actors to sit inside a cage and portray cavemen, "to spark interest in man's Neanderthal past" and "to promote interest in the theatrical play 'Caveman.'" The so-called exhibit is set up in the primate section of the zoo, and the actors are perpetuating ridiculous ideas about what it means to be locked up in a zoo exhibit.

In character, one man says, "This world is very small and we feel safe behind these bars. All of the people on the other side react in so many ways and they are more surprised, scared and confused than us."

Pardon me, but ... what a load of crap. The implication that our fellow animals kept on display in tiny, inadequate habitats "feel safe" because of the bars and the smallness of their world is ludicrous. Boredom suffered, instincts frustrated, privacy denied, exercise limited, social relationships manipulated, families disrupted -- these are the characteristics of life on display behind bars or a glass wall.

The director of the zoo even commented, "Showing an animal in the cage is something normal and common. We wanted to promote the idea that we haven't moved so far away from the animal world. That we are closer to animals than we sometimes think."

This exhibit does nothing to help people understand that we and our fellow animals are alike. There's no challenge here to humans' perceptions of their fellow animals. Indeed, this exhibit, like the director's language, reinforces the notion that we are separate from animals, not animals ourselves. It's a gimmick. Visitors are shocked to see humans in a cage, but they are not encouraged to question why it's OK to keep other animals in cages if it makes them uncomfortable to see humans in cages; instead, they're told that the imprisoned humans (and by implication, the other animals) are content there. Visitors are expected to find amusement in the display of humans who are there temporarily and by choice and to then move on to stare at the zoos' unwilling captives, without questioning a thing. Zoos are a prime example of how we've elevated ourselves above other animals, of how we've decided that they are here for our purposes and our amusement, not remotely proof that "we haven't moved so far away from the animal world." And no, the primary purpose of zoos is not save endangered species, nor is a significant percentage of funds used in that arena; the primary purpose of zoos is to provide entertainment for humans.

We are indeed "closer to animals than we sometimes think," but this ridiculous publicity stunt does nothing to help people see that.

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Photo by Flickr user pelican

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Comments (3)

  1. Mary Martin

    Force the humans to be there indefinitely.

    Then I might feel a legitimate comparison coming on.

    Posted by Mary Martin on 11/29/2009 @ 02:31PM PT

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  2. The Voracious Vegan .

    Ughghg the idea that zoos are such a great option for animals because 'they are safer there than in the wild' is obnoxious and I have heard it way too often.

    It seems like this gimmick is another joke, trivializing what life in a zoo actually means for wild animals.

    Posted by The Voracious Vegan . on 11/29/2009 @ 11:06PM PT

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  3. Chloe price

    i work in a zoo, The Adelaide zoo to be exact, YES some zoo's need improvement it's true but please do research thoroughly before you condemn all of the zoo's! Adelaide+Monarto+Taronga+Australia Zoo all strive for simple goals, CONSERVATION AND AWARENESS if we can get people passionate about saving the Tiger then they will want to help save it.

    animals are not cruelly treated in good zoo's the keepers actually love their animals and care for them quite deeply!

    research BEFORE you condemn.

    Posted by Chloe price on 12/04/2009 @ 10:44PM PT

Author
Stephanie Ernst

Stephanie Ernst is an independent animal rights advocate, a vegan, a tree-hugging environmentalist, and a freelance editor and writer. She lives in St. Louis with an aging corgi-lab and an adolescent rescued pit bull. In her advocacy, she works to challenge prevailing perceptions of animals, to show the connections between animal exploitation and other injustices, to help people see that animals are more like us than different, and to encourage compassionate, nonviolent living and eating.

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