So, another year has come and gone.
2021 was certainly a lot better, all things considered, than 2020 had been - moreover, although the current world situation is still far from normal, the Zoochat community was able to reach rather more zoological collections in the last 12 months than was the case at the start of the pandemic, and the flow of zoo news and discussion has picked up quite a lot. However, there has still been a noticeable drop in the general level of forum discussion and discourse, and an accompanying reduction in the number of lengthy forum-uniting discussions; as such, I've been mulling over the possibility of starting a project with the express purpose of encouraging mass participation and discussion for a while now.
Independently from this, throughout 2021 - as was the case in 2020 - one of my key coping mechanisms for dealing with the stress, anxiety and, on occasion, full-blown autistic meltdowns which the pandemic and accompanying factors have caused has been my existing hobby (a result not merely of my interest in zoos, but also my interest in history and historiography) of collecting zoo guidebooks, maps and other such documents. As a result, I have been participating in a number of groups over on Facebook devoted to the discussion and promotion of zoo guidebooks and other memorabilia, and have increasingly felt that this is a subject which is capable of generating a great number of distinct avenues for discussion, if presented properly; the history of a zoological collection, the socio-economic and political history of the countries in which they are located, how a collection changes and develops over time both in terms of enclosure standards/design and the species held, and even how a collection ultimately falters and is lost.
The key factor which caused these disparate thoughts to click together was my recent highlighting on FB of a number of recent acquisitions which caused my total collection of unique guidebooks to cross into four digits, including two or three particularly unusual items, after which a number of Zoochatters messaged me to bemoan the fact that much of the content on the group in question drops away too rapidly for discussion to take place - one of the pitfalls of the FB group model over the classic forum/messageboard model here on Zoochat!
Therefore, I decided that this year I would aim to post images and discussion of one randomly-selected guidebook from my collection each day - or as regularly as time-commitments allow, with the explicit intention that the Zoochat community ask questions about the contents and context of the guidebooks highlighted, discuss their own guidebook collections where possible, discuss what makes a zoo guidebook or map particularly good, and in general use my posts as the backbone for a nice solid forum-uniting discussion which will hopefully take us throughout 2022
To ensure the thread gets off to a nice juicy start I have actively selected the guidebooks which will be highlighted for the first five days of this project, aiming for collections/items which provide plenty of talking points and potential for questions; after this point, guidebooks will be selected by the simple method of using a random number generator. Each post will, wherever possible, include at minimum an image of the front cover, any accompanying map and at least one internal page.
An index (to be updated as the thread progresses) will follow this post, after which the first guidebook of the year will be highlighted.
I very much look forward to the discussions that are ahead of us!
2021 was certainly a lot better, all things considered, than 2020 had been - moreover, although the current world situation is still far from normal, the Zoochat community was able to reach rather more zoological collections in the last 12 months than was the case at the start of the pandemic, and the flow of zoo news and discussion has picked up quite a lot. However, there has still been a noticeable drop in the general level of forum discussion and discourse, and an accompanying reduction in the number of lengthy forum-uniting discussions; as such, I've been mulling over the possibility of starting a project with the express purpose of encouraging mass participation and discussion for a while now.
Independently from this, throughout 2021 - as was the case in 2020 - one of my key coping mechanisms for dealing with the stress, anxiety and, on occasion, full-blown autistic meltdowns which the pandemic and accompanying factors have caused has been my existing hobby (a result not merely of my interest in zoos, but also my interest in history and historiography) of collecting zoo guidebooks, maps and other such documents. As a result, I have been participating in a number of groups over on Facebook devoted to the discussion and promotion of zoo guidebooks and other memorabilia, and have increasingly felt that this is a subject which is capable of generating a great number of distinct avenues for discussion, if presented properly; the history of a zoological collection, the socio-economic and political history of the countries in which they are located, how a collection changes and develops over time both in terms of enclosure standards/design and the species held, and even how a collection ultimately falters and is lost.
The key factor which caused these disparate thoughts to click together was my recent highlighting on FB of a number of recent acquisitions which caused my total collection of unique guidebooks to cross into four digits, including two or three particularly unusual items, after which a number of Zoochatters messaged me to bemoan the fact that much of the content on the group in question drops away too rapidly for discussion to take place - one of the pitfalls of the FB group model over the classic forum/messageboard model here on Zoochat!
Therefore, I decided that this year I would aim to post images and discussion of one randomly-selected guidebook from my collection each day - or as regularly as time-commitments allow, with the explicit intention that the Zoochat community ask questions about the contents and context of the guidebooks highlighted, discuss their own guidebook collections where possible, discuss what makes a zoo guidebook or map particularly good, and in general use my posts as the backbone for a nice solid forum-uniting discussion which will hopefully take us throughout 2022
To ensure the thread gets off to a nice juicy start I have actively selected the guidebooks which will be highlighted for the first five days of this project, aiming for collections/items which provide plenty of talking points and potential for questions; after this point, guidebooks will be selected by the simple method of using a random number generator. Each post will, wherever possible, include at minimum an image of the front cover, any accompanying map and at least one internal page.
An index (to be updated as the thread progresses) will follow this post, after which the first guidebook of the year will be highlighted.
I very much look forward to the discussions that are ahead of us!
