Science . & D DONNA C MEHOS O Culture N N A Science FOR MEMBERS ONLY C & The Amsterdam Zoo Artis in . the Nineteenth Century M E . H Culture DONNA C MEHOS O S What role did science play in nineteenth-century Dutch cultural life? S c This fascinating slice-of-cultural-life book unveils the significance of Artisas i FOR MEMBERS ONLY e both a scientific center and the cultural hub of the city. It links exhibits of n exotic animals and colonial artifacts, concerts, scientific research, and social c e exclusion to the rise of national consciousness among nineteenth-century Dutch middle classes. The author highlights Dutch society and its efforts to & display colonial wealth before it supported what is traditionally seen as high C culture. Artis flourished with the help of significant private funding at u a time when monumental institutions such as museums and concert halls l t had yet to appear on the Dutch cultural landscape. Artis was a private u institution open to members only that held an unprecedented pride of place r in Dutch society. e F O Donna C. Mehos is a senior researcher at the Technical University of R Eindhoven. M E M B E R S O The Amsterdam Zoo Artis in N L the Nineteenth Century Y ISBN 90-5356-739-9 AMSTERDAMUNIVERSITYPRESS www.aup.nl 9 789053 567395 Amsterdam University Press science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 1 Science and Culture for Members Only science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 2 science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 3 Science and Culture for Members Only The Amsterdam Zoo Artis in the Nineteenth Century Donna C. Mehos science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 4 The publication of this book is made possible by a grant from the M.A.O.C. Gravin van Bylandt Stichting Cover design Studio Jan de Boer bno, Amsterdam Cover illustration Vignette, Jaarboekje van het Zoologisch Genootschap Natur Artis Magistra, Amsterdam: M. Westerman en Zoon, 1852- 1875 Layout PROgrafici, Goes isbn9053567399 nur694 © Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2006 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval sys- tem, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photo- copying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copy- right owner and the author of the book. science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 5 For Jaap science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 6 science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 7 Table of Contents Acknowledgments 9 Introduction The Nation and Nature in Middle-Class Culture 11 Chapter1 Structuring a New Generation’s Scientific Society 21 Chapter2 Private Science and the Public Interest 35 Chapter3 Internationalizing Nationalist Science 59 Chapter4 Science Joins Cultural Life 91 Conclusion Science, Colonial Expansion, and National Identity 125 Appendix: Members of the ArtisBoard of Directors, 1838-1870 131 Notes 137 List of Illustrations and Color Plates 173 Bibliography 177 Index 201 7 science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 8 science and culture 12-01-2006 11:52 Pagina 9 Acknowledgments When I first proposed the history of Artis as a dissertation subject in the mid-1980s, my ideas generated enthusiasm among some historians and skepticism among others. The value of zoo history as a serious academic topic in the history of science was not yet crystal clear. I commenced research that first appeared in my dissertation and has now crystalized into this book. I trust that this work, and various studies of other zoos that have recently appeared, will convince scholars in many sub-fields of history and the social sciences that zoological gardens provide rich resources that help illuminate science and reveal its cultural meanings. I could not have conducted this research without the valuable and friendly assistance of staff members in the libraries of the University of Amsterdam, the Gemeentelijke Archiefdienst Amsterdam, and the Nation- aal Natuurhistorisch Museum Naturalis in Leiden. I am grateful for their help. It is my pleasure to thank here all of my friends and colleagues – too many to name – who have supported me in more ways than they know. While I was a graduate student, the faculty, staff, and my fellow graduate students of the Department of History and Sociology of Science at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania maintained an unusually encouraging and intellec- tually stimulating environment during my years in Philadelphia. When I moved to Amsterdam, the (then) Department of Science and Technology Dynamics at the University of Amsterdam gave me an institutional base for which I am grateful. I was privileged to have participated in their discussion groups and Voortgangsconferenties where drafts of my work were discussed by both department members and outside participants. I thank them for their valuable comments. I am also indebted to the members of the (then) Unit for Mass Spectrometry of Macromolecular Systems at the FOM Insti- tute for Atomic and Molecular Physics in Amsterdam for their technical support, hospitality, and the friendly atmosphere. I am thankful for the 9
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