Project Details
Zoological Categorization of Humans: Behavioral Sciences in the Context of Decolonization and Disciplinary Establishment (C02)
Subject Area
Modern and Contemporary History
Term
since 2021
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 442261292
The project analyzes the behavioral sciences as an authority of human categorization that studies the ‘social’ within animal behavior and, conversely, the ‘animalistic’ in human behavior. The project focuses on the Serengeti Research Institute (SRI) in Tanzania, which emerged as an important site for the production of biological, behavioral and conservation-related knowledge in the 20th century. It analyzes (1) the objectifying and anthropomorphizing language to describe animal behavior; (2) the postcolonial shift of racialized differences between European and Western scientists and Africans into categories of qualification or roles; (3) the spatial differentiations between humans and animals in Tanzania’s wildlife policies. It aims to show how categorical differences between humans and animals were bound up with categorizations between the human personnel of the research institute.
DFG Programme
Collaborative Research Centres
Subproject of
SFB 1482:
Studies in Human Categorization
Applicant Institution
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Project Head
Professor Dr. Johannes Paulmann