Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa

Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2022.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sanderson, Dayni
Other Authors: Van Wyk, Ilana
Format: Thesis
Language:en_ZA
Published: Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University 2022
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614049814970368
access_status_str Open Access
author Sanderson, Dayni
author2 Van Wyk, Ilana
author_browse Sanderson, Dayni
Van Wyk, Ilana
author_facet Van Wyk, Ilana
Sanderson, Dayni
author_sort Sanderson, Dayni
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv Stellenbosch University
description Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2022.
format Thesis
id oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/126162
institution Stellenbosch University (South Africa)
language en_ZA
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:45:52.267Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
publisherStr Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
record_format dspace
source_str SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
spelling oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/126162 Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa Sanderson, Dayni Van Wyk, Ilana Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Sociology and Social Anthropology. Two Oceans Aquarium (Cape Town, South Africa) Anthropology -- Fieldwork Environmentalism Community-based conservation -- South Africa -- Cape Town Ethnology Education -- Secondary -- Curricula -- South Africa -- Cape Town Villains Science -- Study and teaching (Secondary) Information literacy Children -- South Africa -- Cape Town -- Social conditions UCTD Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2022. ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In this thesis, I focus an ethnographic lens on the non-profit arm of one of Cape Town’s most iconic institutions, the Two Oceans Aquarium (TOA). Like a number of other aquariums and zoos across the world, the TOA frames itself primarily as a conservation and education organisation. Based on six months of fieldwork at the Aquarium’s Education Foundation and inspired by critical approaches in anthropology, this thesis interrogates the narrative and programmatic content of this framing and its imprint on a wider “witnessing public” (Chua, 2018:a). In particular, I analyse the TOA’s online mediascape and explore the various environmental classes that the Foundation offered to school children; its on-site, week-long holiday Smart Living programme and its hour-long “outreach” classes in disadvantaged areas of the City. I also analyse the motivation letters of children who applied for the TOA’s free holiday courses. My research shows that the TOA was haunted by the class and racial legacies of local (and international) conservation. I argue that in its embrace of mainstream environmentalism, the TOA unintentionally depoliticised the environmental crisis to offer solutions that trumpeted individualised new forms of consumption that either excluded poor people or framed them as environmental villains. This middle-class, prescriptive environmentalism thus reproduced messages that mapped environmental destruction onto race and class. Through the working of its hidden curriculum, the TOA’s lessons to school children repeated this message and shaped the ways in which a new generation related to the environment and “nature”; a relationship in which the privileged retained a proprietary interest in conservation, while disadvantaged children internalised their supposed culpability in environmental collapse. As I show in this thesis, the TOA was not alone in doing this work; as the children’s letters to the TOA attested, most of them had been exposed to similar messages from a much wider world of hegemonic middle-class environmentalism. AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In hierdie tesis fokus ek ‘n etnografiese lens op die nie-winsgewende afdeling van een van Kaapstad se mees ikoniese institusies, die Twee Oseane Akwarium (TOA). Soos ander akwariums en dieretuine wêreldwyd verkies die TOA om hulself hoofsaaklik voor te stel as ‘n omgewingsbewaring- en opleidingsorganisasie. Ek bestudeer die verhalende en programmatiese uitdrukking van dié voorstelling en die impak daarvan op ‘n groter ‘meelewende publiek’ (Chua, 2018:a) vanuit ‘n kritiese antropologiese oogpunt. Gebaseer op 18 maande se etnografiese veldwerk by die TOA se Opvoedingstigting, analiseer ek die TOA se aanlyn medialandskap en die verskeie omgewingsbewaringsklasse wat die Stigting aangebied het aan skoliere. Die laasgenoemde sluit in die Stigting se weeklange Smart Living vakansieklasse wat op die TOA perseel aangebied is sowel as die Stigting se uurlange “uitreik” klasse wat aan minder bevoorregde skoliere in hulle skole aangebied is. Ek analiseer ook die motiveringsbriewe wat kinders aan die TOA geskryf het ter stawing van hulle aansoeke om die TOA se gratis vakansieprogram by te woon. My navorsing dui daarop dat die TOA se omgewingsbewaringslesse uitdrukking gegee het aan die klasse en rasse nalatenskap van plaaslike en internasionale omgewingsbewaring. Ek argumenteer dat in die TOA se napraat van hoofstroomnatuurbewaringsbewustheid, die organisasie onwetend en onbedoelend die omgewingskrisis gedepolitiseer het. As sulks het die TOA se oplossings vir die krisis ‘n vorm van individuele verbuik voorgestaan wat arm mense of uitgesluit het of hulle as skurke in omgewingsbesoedeling uitgebeeld het. Hierdie middelklas voorskriftelike omgewingsbewaringbewustheid het dus omgewingsvernietiging geskool op ras en klas kategoriee. Die TOA het hierdie boodskap herhaal in hulle klasse aan skoliere deur die werking van hulle versteekte kurrikulum. Sodoende het die TOA deel gehad aan die skawing van ‘n nuwe generasie en hulle verhouding met die ‘natuur’ en met omgewingsbewaring; ‘n verhouding waarin bevoorregtes omgewingsbewaring aan hulself toegeeien het as ‘n verdiende erfenis en waar minderbevoorregte kinders hulle vermeende skuld aan omgewingsineenstorting geinternaliseer het. Die TOA was nie alleen in die taak nie, ‘n feit wat duidelik vorendag gekom het in die kinders se aansoekbriewe aan die TOA; hulle was reeds blootgestel aan die hegemoniese werk van middelklas omgewingsbewustheid. Masters 2022-11-23T11:53:57Z 2023-01-16T12:53:16Z 2022-11-23T11:53:57Z 2023-01-16T12:53:16Z 2022-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/126162 en_ZA Stellenbosch University application/pdf Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
spellingShingle Two Oceans Aquarium (Cape Town, South Africa)
Anthropology -- Fieldwork
Environmentalism
Community-based conservation -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Ethnology
Education -- Secondary -- Curricula -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Villains
Science -- Study and teaching (Secondary)
Information literacy
Children -- South Africa -- Cape Town -- Social conditions
UCTD
Sanderson, Dayni
Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title_short Teaching environmentality: An ethnographic study of an aquarium’s environmental lessons in Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort teaching environmentality an ethnographic study of an aquarium s environmental lessons in cape town south africa
topic Two Oceans Aquarium (Cape Town, South Africa)
Anthropology -- Fieldwork
Environmentalism
Community-based conservation -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Ethnology
Education -- Secondary -- Curricula -- South Africa -- Cape Town
Villains
Science -- Study and teaching (Secondary)
Information literacy
Children -- South Africa -- Cape Town -- Social conditions
UCTD
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/126162
work_keys_str_mv AT sandersondayni teachingenvironmentalityanethnographicstudyofanaquariumsenvironmentallessonsincapetownsouthafrica