Join us in welcoming OSU professor John M. Kinder for a free, in-store event to celebrate World War Zoos on Tuesday, July 29, 2025 at 7:00pm. This event will take place in the Algonquin Room at Magic City Books, 221 E. Archer Street in the Tulsa Arts District.
John will be in conversation with Reverend Chris Moore, who serves as President of the Board for Tulsa Metropolitan Ministry and works with ACTION, a broad-based community organizing effort.
"A book that combines academic rigor and genuine empathy to document extraordinary suffering--human and animal. The author rightly excoriates those who would abuse animals, but he also questions the wider relevance of zoos and the imposition of one animal's right to keep another in a cage--during times of war or peace." -- The Wall Street Journal
World War Zoos was published by University of Chicago Press on April 22, 2025, and you can purchase a copy through Magic City Books:
https://magiccitybooks.com/item/9ZxRdsPjgut3-UUG_YVQdw
About World War Zoos
As Europe lurched into war in 1939, zookeepers started killing their animals. On September 1, as German forces invaded Poland, Warsaw began with its reptiles. Two days later, workers at the London Zoo launched a similar spree, dispatching six alligators, seven iguanas, sixteen southern anacondas, six Indian fruit bats, a fishing cat, a binturong, a Siberian tiger, five magpies, an Alexandrine parakeet, two bullfrogs, three lion cubs, a cheetah, four wolves, and a manatee over the next few months. Zoos worldwide did the same. The reasons were many, but the pattern was clear: The war that was about to K*ll so many people started by killing so many animals. Why? And how did zoos, nevertheless, not just survive the war but play a key role in how people did, too?
A harrowing yet surprisingly uplifting chronicle, Kinder's World War Zoos traces how zoos survived the deadliest decades of global history, from the Great Depression, through the terrors of World War II, to the dawn of the Cold War. More than anything before or since, World War II represented an existential threat to the world's zoological institutions. Some zoos were bombed; others bore the indignities of foreign occupation. Even zoos that were spared had to wrestle with questions rarely asked in public: What should they do when supplies ran low? Which animals should be killed to protect the lives of others? And how could zoos justify keeping dangerous animals that might escape and run wild during an aerial attack?
Zoos in wartime reveal the shared vulnerabilities of humans and animals during periods of social unrest and environmental peril. World War II-era zoos offered people ways to think about and grapple with imprisonment, powerlessness, and degradation. Viewed today, the story of zoos during World War II can be read as an allegory of twenty-first-century crises, as the effects of climate change threaten all life across the planet.
A one-of-a-kind history, World War Zoos is the story of how the world's zoos survived the deadliest conflict of the twentieth century--and what was lost along the way.
About the Author
John M. Kinder is director of American Studies and professor of history at Oklahoma State University. He is the author of Paying with Their Bodies: American War and the Problem of the Disabled Veteran, also published by the University of Chicago Press, and coeditor of Service Denied: Marginalized Veterans in Modern American History.
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