All the World’s a Stage: Thoughts on the Death of Harambe, the Cincinnati Zoo Gorilla

A gorilla named Harambe has been shot and killed.

And just as Blackfish—the film exposing everything wrong with using orcas for human observation and fun—reverberates beyond SeaWorld and challenges the existence of aquaria generally, so will Harambe force the public to rethink gorillas wherever we look at them. Harambe’s life, we now must note, was marked by isolation from this gorilla’s own parents, and by alienation, transit and objectification.

And like the great killer whales, a zoo gorilla, alive or dead, has lost a lifetime, missing everything that makes a free life possible…

Read more here . . .


Photo offered through Creative Commons for non-commercial use; original image by Frank Wouters on Flickr: link.

3 thoughts on “All the World’s a Stage: Thoughts on the Death of Harambe, the Cincinnati Zoo Gorilla

  1. So many are outraged by an endangered gorilla being shot to death, but conveniently ignore or excuse that human’s animal agriculture, human overpopulation and human civilization itself are the main causes of nonhumanimal species extinction. Yet more extreme speciesist hypocrisy.

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