The Wild Animal’s Story: Nonhuman Protagonists in Twentieth-Century Canadian Literature through the Lens of Practical Zoocriticism
particularly clear in the nineteenth-century animal welfare movement, the upper
Download 3.36 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Allmark-KentC
particularly clear in the nineteenth-century animal welfare movement, the upper and middle class supporters of which were all dependent on animal exploitation in some way: “so many of the men and women who supported it—from sportsmen and vivisectionists to cattle ranchers and owners of carting agencies —were connected to professional, industrial and recreational activities involving animals” (223). It is unsurprising, then, that “more complex interpretations of animal welfare ” were unable to develop (223). Likewise, we also find this tension represented in the wildlife conservation movement. Tina Loo asserts: “To observers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, there was little doubt that wildlife populations were declining. Nor was there much question about the reason for that decline. Extinction was a by-p roduct of expansion” (16). Yet, the government showed little concern, there was no “crusade” for wildlife as there was later in the United States, and nor did public champions come forward to lead the cause (Foster 3- 4). In addition to this tension between exploitation and protection, a number of other factors seem to have stalled progress, as Janet Foster explains: An uninhabited frontier, the myth of superabundance, an era of exploitation and lack of knowledge about wildlife, the political climate of the National Policy and the division of powers under the British North America Act —all of these factors and attitudes within the government and among Canadian people generally, obstructed and delayed the advent of wildlife conservation in Canada. (12) Allmark-Kent 85 In America, Yellowstone National Park was established in 1872 to preserve wilderness and wildlife; when Canada first reserved ten acres of land in Banff in 1885, it was to “preserve a valuable natural resource that could be exploited in the interests of the gov ernment and railway” (20). Two years later when Banff Hot Springs was protected as the country’s first national park, it was not a wildlife sanctuary but a tourist resort (20, 25). Moreover, J. Alexander Burnett explains that, although Canada continued to establish national parks and there was even a “flurry of activity” in this area by the end of the century, the nation’s efforts to protect wildlife remained “rudimentary” (7). This would start to change in the early years of the twentieth century, however, as public interest in this was on the rise and the back-to-nature movement was taking hold in both Canada and the United States. Significantly, Burnett makes a brief interlude in relating the history of the Canadian Wildlife Service to detail the contributions made by Seton and Roberts: “Among the most influential participants in this popular groundswell were Ernest Thompson Seton and Charles G.D. Roberts” (7). He notes that the stories of both of these “keen outdoorsmen,” positioned “wildlife sympathetically in the public consci ousness;” although he specifies that Seton was the “serious naturalist” and “active lobbyist for conservation” (7-8). Moreover, not only does Burnett make these connections between their writing and efforts to encourage public concern for Canada’s wildlife, he also reveals their collaborations with Americans. For instance, he lists Seton and Roberts as key figures —amongst John Macoun, John Muir, and Jack Miner —in a group who strongly influenced the signing of the Migratory Birds Convention in 1916. As spokesmen for this unofficial, but powerful, coalition of naturalists, writers, hunters, and scientists from both sides of the national border, Seton and Roberts worked to “replace Allmark-Kent 86 the frontier myth of limitless wildlife,” and “succeeded in arousing public opinion to a degree that commanded the respect of political leaders in Canada and the United States” (29). Again, although Burnett echoes the attitudes of Polk and others by describing the wild animal story as “the most Canadian of literary genres” (7), it is clear that Seton and Roberts were not representing typically Download 3.36 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling