Serengeti Shall Not Die

Thomas M. Lekan
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Abstract

This chapter explores the politics of scientific knowledge and visual representation of savanna environments in Bernhard and Michael Grzimek’s bestselling book and Academy Award–winning documentary film, Serengeti Shall Not Die (1959). It shows how the Grzimeks used their iconic airplane, nicknamed the “Flying Zebra,” to conduct ecological reconnaissance and employ aerial filmography. They depicted the Serengeti as an untouched ecosystem and a global heritage of mankind, despite its history of pastoralist land use and as a battleground between contending German and British imperial forces. Following international conventions established in London in 1933, the Grzimeks insisted that the Serengeti should encompass the entire habitat of migrating wildebeest—and not, as some officials in the Tanganyika Territory insisted, be divided to accommodate the local Maasai people’s customary cattle grazing. The Grzimeks failed to stop the redrawing of the park’s boundaries, partly because the airborne camera never expunged the Serengeti’s “ghosts of land use past.”
塞伦盖蒂不会消亡
本章探讨了在Bernhard和Michael Grzimek的畅销书和奥斯卡获奖纪录片《Serengeti Shall Not Die》(1959)中科学知识的政治和稀树草原环境的视觉表现。它展示了格兹梅克人如何使用他们的标志性飞机,绰号“飞行斑马”,进行生态侦察和使用空中摄影。他们将塞伦盖蒂描述为一个未受破坏的生态系统和人类的全球遗产,尽管它的历史上曾是畜牧业土地的使用,也是德国和英国帝国军队之间的战场。根据1933年在伦敦制定的国际公约,格兹梅克人坚持认为塞伦盖蒂应该包括迁徙角马的整个栖息地,而不是像坦噶尼喀地区的一些官员所坚持的那样,为了适应当地马赛人习惯的放牧而划分。格里兹梅克人没能阻止公园边界的重新划定,部分原因是机载摄像机从未抹去塞伦盖蒂“过去土地使用的幽灵”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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