Zoological Gardens, Austerity, and Staging the Extinction of the 'Last' Thylacine
2019
This chapter examines the Beaumaris zoo in Hobart, Tasmania, through the award-winning Australian 2014 play They Saw a Thylacine, by Justine Campbell and Sarah Hamilton. The Beaumaris zoo was the location of the death of the "last" thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) on September 7, 1936. Campbell and Hamilton's play is a fertile text for examining the impact of austerity on zoological gardens because it situates the narrative of the "last" thylacine within the economic pressures of 1930s Tasmania. As noted by Denise Varney, "[A]nthropocentric and sexist economic and social conditions are shown to come into play in a way that fatally compounds the precarious existence of the species" (2015, 7). This chapter examines how the play highlights the place of gender, class, race, sexuality, and species in the economic narratives that are central to the thylacine' s demise and contextualizes this with the politics of austerity, value, and exchange in zoological gardens more broadly.
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