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In Detroit and London: More African Villages in the Zoo

There’s been much discussion about the African Village in the Augsburg Zoo that took place last weekend. At the same time, the Detroit Zoo has arranged an African American Festival: “It will feature storyteller Ivory D. Williams, arts and crafts, authentic style food, hip-hop lessons, dance groups and an African American Community Resource area.” They plan even more festivals like the Middle Eastern Festival, Caribbean Festival and the Native American Festival. No Bavarian or European festival, though. >> read the press release

The African Village in the Augsburg zoo wasn’t actually a village. Visitors and journalists told about the usual stands with rings, arts and food that one finds on every festival. As Zeyneb Kaengo, 39, an African who was cooking at an African food stand, told the press: “I do not understand why people are protesting. Maybe they thought we were going to be put in cages, but that’s not true,” she said.

Nevertheless, the question remains “why Europe is suddenly obsessed with this exotic fascination for Africa, which only the zoo can provide” as the Guardian (Nigeria) asks in an interesting article. They write about forthcoming “African nights” in the London Zoo.

On the zoo’s homepage we read:

“In addition to the unique opportunity to experience the animals settling in for the evening, visitors will be able to soak up the African culture with themed animal shows, live African performances, licensed bars and African food on offer throughout the evening. For the children there will be the opportunity to learn how to make Maasai masks, listen to traditional African stories and have their faces painted like tribal warriors!”

>> continue

As anthropologist Nina Glick Schiller commented, the city of Seattle, USA, put Africans in a Zoo in May 2001, see article in the Seattle Post

SEE ALSO:

BBC: Row over German zoo’s Africa show

Radio interview on African Village/ “Germans & Japanese less sensitive about race”

African village in the Zoo: Protest against racist exhibition

There's been much discussion about the African Village in the Augsburg Zoo that took place last weekend. At the same time, the Detroit Zoo has arranged an African American Festival: "It will feature storyteller Ivory D. Williams, arts and crafts,…

Read more

Seeing Africa as exceptional underestimates common experience of globalisation

Anthropologist Christopher Davis, The Guardian

Tony Blair’s Commission for Africa has left me bewildered. As an anthropologist interested in “traditional” medicine, I was delighted to see its report’s attempt to take an Africa-centred point of view. Reading a sentence stating that “history shows African cultures to have been tremendously adaptive, absorbing a wide range of outside influences” is a relief to those of us who have tried for years to make this point.

But I was frustrated by what seems to be our incapacity to escape our own mental traditions – the casts of mind that always seem to come into play when we imagine Africa. Nowhere were these more in evidence than in the report’s discussion of the role of religion in African social life. The risk is of the return of the 19th-century idea of “primitive mentality”: the idea that “they” are less rational than “we” are. >> continue

>> see comments by Kerim Friedman /Savage Minds

Anthropologist Christopher Davis, The Guardian

Tony Blair's Commission for Africa has left me bewildered. As an anthropologist interested in "traditional" medicine, I was delighted to see its report's attempt to take an Africa-centred point of view. Reading a sentence stating that…

Read more

BBC: Row over German zoo’s Africa show

BBC

German anti-racism campaigners have condemned plans to stage an African cultural festival in a zoo. Responding to the criticism, Augsburg Zoo Director Barbara Jantschke said she does not see anything wrong with staging the event in a zoo, where many cultural exhibitions are held. Mrs Jantschke also argued that the zoo was the ideal place to convey the necessary “exotic atmosphere” for the festival.

It is an attitude which campaigners like Ms Noah So want to change. “There is an urge in Germany to see those who are not white as part of something exotic or romanticised.” This treatment insinuates that non-whites are not really part of German society, she says. >> continue

Read also German magazine DER SPIEGEL: German Zoo Scandal: ‘African Village’ Accused of Putting Humans on Display

MORE INFORMATION AND LINKS:
African village in the Zoo: Protest against racist exhibition

BBC

German anti-racism campaigners have condemned plans to stage an African cultural festival in a zoo. Responding to the criticism, Augsburg Zoo Director Barbara Jantschke said she does not see anything wrong with staging the event in a zoo, where many…

Read more

Most searched words: Zoo Augsburg african village. Newspapers start to report

Just a short note on what people search: “Zoo Augsburg african village” are the most searched words at the moment. It’s quite striking how often this site is visited by people (from countries all over the world!) searching for news about the planned exhibition of Africans in the Zoo in Augsburg, Germany. The news has spread mainly via the internet. Only two newspapers (update 1.6.: now it’s three – no four!) in Germany have been interested in this issue so far. It is widely debated on German language blogs and forums, though.

Here I’ve collected updated news and links:

>> African village in the Zoo: Protest against racist exhibition

>> Bewusster oder unbewusster Rassismus? Proteste gegen “African Village” im Zoo

Just a short note on what people search: "Zoo Augsburg african village" are the most searched words at the moment. It's quite striking how often this site is visited by people (from countries all over the world!) searching for news…

Read more

The resurrection of anthropology: ”North Africa in anthropological debates”

Morocco Times

Prologues, the North African review of books, chose to dedicate its winter issue to anthropology in North Africa. Coordinated by anthropologist Hassan Rachik, this number focuses on the evolution of this discipline in both North Africa and Spain. After decades of isolation due its being associated with colonisation and ethnic divisions, anthropology is slowly making its way back into universities.

Now that North African countries no longer focus on the protection of their newly acquired Nation States – which led them to cast aside anything outside their common Arab heritage – it is up to the very descendants of the populations examined by Gellner, Geertz or Berque to make this discipline theirs. >> continue

Morocco Times

Prologues, the North African review of books, chose to dedicate its winter issue to anthropology in North Africa. Coordinated by anthropologist Hassan Rachik, this number focuses on the evolution of this discipline in both North Africa and Spain. After…

Read more