{"id":672,"date":"2011-06-10T20:41:55","date_gmt":"2011-06-10T20:41:55","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/?p=672"},"modified":"2012-01-31T21:24:53","modified_gmt":"2012-01-31T21:24:53","slug":"romantic-rhinos-and-victorian-vipers-the-zoo-as-nineteenth-century-spectacle","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/romantic-rhinos-and-victorian-vipers-the-zoo-as-nineteenth-century-spectacle\/","title":{"rendered":"Romantic Rhinos and Victorian Vipers: The Zoo as Nineteenth-Century Spectacle"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote>\n<h4 style=\"text-align: center\">by Ashton Nichols<\/h4>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>If you could have seen what it was like when I was a boy\u2013half zoo and half museum, my father let us do anything we wanted. For a while we had a big tree in the corner, with live birds roosting in it. Aquariums, and an ant colony, and turtles and salamanders; and jars of preserved specimens everywhere, big slabs of fossil-bearing rock and mastodon bones and a plant press, books open on all the tables. A wonderful, fertile clutter.<\/em> (260)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>I begin with a fictional passage from Andrea Barrett\u2019s evocative 1998 novel, <em>The Voyage of the Narwhal<\/em>. Barrett\u2019s description of her main character, Erasmus Darwin Wells, reflecting here on his childhood memory of the natural history repository his father had created in the early years of the nineteenth-century, captures the mood of a moment that was particularly important in the history of humans relations to the animal kingdom. Natural history cabinets, like zoos and other forms of live or dead animal display, emerged out of precisely the combination of scientific curiosity and fascination with spectacle that is captured in the rhetoric of Barrett\u2019s fictional imagining; to see something new and amazing was to learn something new, but the experience was also about being excited, titillated or amazed by captive animals or the remains of their capture.<\/p>\n<p>Only in recent years have zoos come in for much sustained scholarly attention. But zoological gardens in the nineteenth century developed as cultural sites with important implications for our understanding of the material aspects of imperialism, the various discourses of domination, and the relations between ideas of spectacle and our treatment of other species, as well as our own. The zoo chronicles an important history about the way humans seek to dominate their environment, often under the guise of gaining knowledge. The first monarchs and potentates who assembled royal parks, menageries, and pleasure-gardens filled with living creatures made no pretense about their purposes. To fence or cage other creatures was to control them for a number of related reasons: hunting, food, entertainment or mere diversion. The power of possession was justification enough for collections of lions, tigers, monkeys, giraffes, eagles, serpents and other exotic creatures that date at least to the time of the Egyptian pharaohs. <a title=\"Samuel Taylor Coleridge\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/samuel-taylor-coleridge\/\">Kubla Khan\u2019s<\/a> \u201cpleasure dome\u201d was just such a menagerie. By the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, however, scientific knowledge became the primary justification for private, and eventually public, gatherings and displays of a wide variety of creatures from around the world.<\/p>\n<p>Henry I began the first royal British menagerie; his collection found its way eventually into the Tower of London where it remained until 1831. Stamford Raffles founded the Zoological Society of London in Regent\u2019s Park in 1826, but the grounds were not formally opened to visitors until 1828 and not to the general public (that is, without invitation or subscription) until 1846. The immediate success of Raffles venture, however, was indicated by a report from the government council indicating that 112,226 people visited the zoological garden during the first year of its operation. William IV soon closed the Tower of London menagerie and presented the royal collection of creatures, along with those from Windsor Great Park, to the Zoological Society (Altick 317). This royal act suggested an important transfer of cultural authority; the collecting of captive animals by the 1830s was no longer a sign of the wealth and power of a single monarch but an added symbol of the domination of an imperial nation over the far corners of the earth from which these animals originated.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to zoos, of course, animals had been exhibited in a variety of carnival, fair, and \u201cfreak\u201d show settings since the Middle Ages. The first <a title=\"Rhinoceroses, Elephants, Crocodiles and other \u201cMonsters\u201d\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/rhinoceroses-elephants-crocodiles-and-other-monsters\/\">rhinoceros<\/a>, for example, arrived in Restoration London aboard an East Indiaman ship in 1684 and was exhibited in numerous locales (at \u201cBartholomew Faire,\u201d at the \u201cBell Sauvage Inn at the foot of Ludgate Hill\u201c and elsewhere) until its untimely death two years later. As Richard Altick notes, \u201cmuch of the charm of these show beasts resided in the aura of mystery or romance in which the showmen diligently wrapped them\u201d (37). The curious\u2013if not terrifying\u2013sight of a rhinoceros was, of course, linked to the myth of the unicorn from the moment of its first arrival in England. Such \u201csideshow\u201d animal exhibitions continued unabated into the nineteenth century. Indeed, the ostensibly scientific objectivity of zoos shades over in important ways into these and other even less savory forms of animal exploitation: menagerie displays, circus performances, bear and bull baiting, cock fighting, dog racing. As Randy Malamud says, \u201cthe Renaissance age of imperialism made it economically, historically, and morally possible to amass animals and squeeze them into the compartments people created for them. The Victorian Age accelerated, institutionalized, and sanctified the processes of zookeeping and zoo spectatorship\u201d (15).<\/p>\n<p>Zoos have had a special status in the history of humans relations to animals because they offered not only the frisson of live animals on display but also the satisfactions of imperial conquest (representatives of the spectators\u2019 culture had collected these creatures from every corner of the globe) and of scientific advancement (these specimens would be useful for taxonomic, anatomical, and even breeding purposes). Zoos, unlike other animal spectacles, helped to track and preserve records of the vast expansion of knowledge that accompanied <a title=\"Global Exploration and New Forms of Nature\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/global-exploration-and-new-forms-of-nature\/\">exploration of the globe<\/a> and the subsequent return of living specimens to European and later American cities. One way of proving the importance of the voyage or journey you had just completed was to bring back specimens, alive or dead, that confirmed the exotic aspect of the locales to which you had traveled. Thus an officer of the East India Company like Raffles might return with\u00a0 \u201cSumatran animals\u201d at the end of his tour of duty, or \u201cgreat white\u201d hunters and collectors like Carl Hagenbeck and Frank Buck might trade in animals the way others traded in ivory, spices, or slaves. In fact, the trade in living animals was not as independent of the early trade in human flesh as we might imagine; the same ships that trafficked in human cargo often transported \u201ccreatures\u201d of other varieties as well. As a result, zoos participated throughout the century in the spectacle of animal capture, transportation, and exposition that was part of the larger discourse of domination that characterized nineteenth-century European imperialism.<\/p>\n<p>As Harriet Ritvo notes of early nineteenth-century visitors to Regent\u2019s Park Zoo,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cthere was ample opportunity for visitors to enjoy simultaneously the thrill of proximity to wild animals and the happy sense of superiority produced by their incarceration. Only the exceptional visitor, such as the critic Leigh Hunt, found this relationship other than pleasant. He was struck by the animals\u2019 \u2018quiet . . . and the human-like sort of intercourse into which they get with their visiters [sic]\u2019 and ended his tour of the London zoo feeling melancholy about their captivity\u201d (Ritvo 219-20).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Hunt would eventually write movingly about the wrongs of animal captivity, \u201cWhy can we have Acts of Parliament in favor of other extension of good treatment to the brute creation, and not one against their tormenting imprisonment?\u201d Animals\u2019 lives under such conditions, he concluded, \u201cturned into lingering deaths\u201d (Altick 318). But Hunt\u2019s reaction to caged animals was clearly the exception.<\/p>\n<p>For most people, the spectacular aspect of the zoo\u2013the experience of merely looking at wild animals\u2013was innocent and entertaining. Before the Regent\u2019s Park Zoo opened to the general public, there were times when tickets for members and their guests were reputed to be as hard to get as those to the opera. Sophisticated Londoners\u2013like their counterparts in Paris, Berlin, and Amsterdam\u2013might travel to the zoo whenever a new animal had arrived from some far-flung destination. Exhibited creatures formed the basis for conversation, public lectures, scientific research, and artistic expression. Spectators were particularly drawn by those animal activities, such as feeding time, that were likely to produce the most active and energetic exposition of the animal\u2019s wildness or strangeness. In addition, of course, the zoo created a satisfying illusion about human control over nature. If authorized representatives of the forces of social order could capture and cage creatures from the wild, then perhaps humans also had the power to tame the natural world in more general terms. During the century that saw the ravages of the Industrial Revolution, and the first sustained assault on natural resources from South America to South Africa, the artificiality of the lion enclosure and the reptile house suggested another way that humans might transform \u201cnature\u201d for their own purposes.<\/p>\n<p>A number of the motives for animal collection and display were legitimately scientific, taxonomic, and economic, but there were clearly more sinister sides to this activity. <a title=\"William Blake\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/william-blake\/\">Blake<\/a> had reminded his society as early as 1803 that \u201cA Robin Redbreast in a Cage \/ Puts all Heaven in a Rage.\u201d\u00a0 Indeed, the attempt to keep wild animals in captivity produced an immeasurable amount of disease, suffering, and death among the captives. The average large mammal lived for only two years in captivity by the middle years of the century. Live animals were treated in ways that suggest the deep psychological undercurrents of all animal capture and display. When Queen Victoria visited the lion-taming act of Isaac Van Amburgh, the animals \u201chad been kept purposely without food for six and thirty hours\u201d so that the Queen might see them \u201cin their more excited and savage state during the operation of feeding them\u201d (Ritvo 224). The sense that humans might create their own versions of animal savagery with the help of deprivation or outright torture was confirmed by a London journalist in 1870 who reported \u201chow true the animals are to their savage instincts, even in confinement\u201d: the evidence for this \u201cnatural\u201d savagery derived solely from the description of\u00a0 feeding time as the \u201ccrowning point of the show,\u201d remarking on the \u201cbellowing, roaring, and growling\u201d of the carnivores in conjunction with the excitement produced by the way \u201cthey drag and tear the big bone or lump of raw meat\u201d (Ritvo 224). The apparent \u201cwildness\u201d of many of these creatures could thus be directly tied to the conditions produced by the humans in charge of their captivity.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps the most public example of cruelty to caged animals during the nineteenth-century was the execution of Chunee, a five-ton Indian <a title=\"Rhinoceroses, Elephants, Crocodiles and other \u201cMonsters\u201d\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/rhinoceroses-elephants-crocodiles-and-other-monsters\/\">elephant<\/a>. Chunee began his captive life as a performer on stage and then had gone on to become a leading attraction at the Exeter \u2019Change Menagerie in the Strand in London. Chunee was described as being tame to the point of docility for years, but as he matured he became increasingly violent during periods of \u201cmusth,\u201d outbursts of male sexual excitement that were eventually seen as a threat to his keepers and even to the general public. Chunee\u2019s execution in 1826 was not accomplished easily. When he refused to ingest the poison that had been prepared for him, his death required, by one account, 152 musket balls and over an hour, with the coup de grace finally being delivered by a sword. One witness reported that the sound of the elephant\u2019s \u201cagony had been much more alarming than that made by the soldier\u2019s guns\u201d (Ritvo 226); in addition, witnesses reported that the elephant\u2019s profuse quantities of blood had flowed deep on the floor of his cage. Chunee\u2019s death was followed by illustrations in the popular press of the massive creature kneeling behind bars while volley after volley was fired into his bleeding chest and legs. Letters filled the Times in protest not only at Chunee\u2019s death but at the conditions of his life in captivity. Poems appeared with sentiments on the order of \u201cFarewell, poor Chunny! Generous beast, farewell!\u201d (Altick 314). The sad saga was even the source of a successful play at Sadler\u2019s Wells, Chuneelah; or, The Death of the Elephant at Exeter \u2018Change.<\/p>\n<p>An additional aspect of animal captivity by this time was precisely the extent to which animals like Chunee might be anthropomorphized into figures worthy of comparison with humans. Here is <a title=\"Lord Byron\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/lord-byron\/\">Lord Byron<\/a>, recording a visit to the Exeter Change in his journal for 14 November 1813:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Two nights ago I saw the tigers sup at Exeter \u2019Change. Except Veli Pacha&#8217;s lion in\u00a0 the Morea,&#8211;who followed the Arab keeper like a dog,&#8211;the fondness of the hyaena for her keeper amused me most. Such a conversazione! &#8212; There was a &#8220;hippopotamus,&#8221; like Lord L[iverpoo]l in the face; and the &#8220;Ursine Sloth&#8221; hath the very voice and manner of my valet&#8211;but the tiger talked too much. The elephant [probably Chunee himself] took and gave me my money again&#8211;took off my hat&#8211;opened a door&#8211; trunked a whip&#8211;and behaved so well, that I wish he was my butler. The handsomest animal on earth is one of the panthers; but the poor antelopes were dead. I should hate to see one here:&#8211;the sight of the camel made me pine again for Asia Minor.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As in Byron\u2019s descriptions, numerous other writers praised chimps, orang-u-tans, and comparably \u201csagacious\u201d beasts for their intellect and for the strong appearance of emotion that often characterized their behavior. Such humanization of captive creatures was part of a larger attempt to explain similarities between the animal kingdom and human life without the scientific evidence that would soon be provided by <a title=\"Charles Darwin\" href=\"http:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/07\/charles-darwin\/\">Darwin\u2019s theory<\/a>. Caged creatures, according to Byron and other writers, might look or act like prime ministers or presidents; these similarities could be instructive about both the animals and their human counterparts. By the time evolutionary models began to have widespread influence in the Victorian era, this anthropomorphism would be reversed and Darwin himself could be depicted with the head of an ape in the popular press. Thomas Hardy expressed another version of this anthropomorphism in his astonishment that modern humans could \u201ctolerate such useless inflictions as making animals do what is unnatural to them, to drag out life in a wired cell\u201d(Malamud 17).<\/p>\n<p>Zoos represented a form of living natural history (while also housing subjects for research and scientific study), but they also offered continuing records of the forms of control exerted by \u201cdominant\u201d cultures over the rest of the world. Sophisticated Londoners or Parisians could thus feel edified while observing captive animals from around the globe, while at the same time experiencing a sense that their societies had subdued the far-flung destinations from which these remarkable creatures originated. By midcentury, as Ritvo notes, \u201cas the emblem of British domination over its colonial empire, the London Zoo also inevitably came to symbolize Britain\u2019s competition for preeminence with western rivals\u201d (231). If Paris and Moscow had a panda, then certainly London needed one. If you could see \u201cRoyal Bengal\u201d tigers on the Indian subcontinent, then surely you should be able to see one not far from the banks of the Thames. Indeed, possession of creatures from distant parts of the world served at best as a shorthand and at worst as a substitute for actual understanding of the \u201cunknown\u201d places from which these creatures had come. For countless well-to-do middle and upper-class Europeans, visits to zoos became a vicarious means of actually participating in the process of empire building.<\/p>\n<p>E. F. Benson, in an essay entitled \u201cThe Zoo\u201d (1893), suggests a deeper, and ultimately more psychological source for the spectatorial attraction (and repulsion) often associated with zoo going. He is describing his own Victorian visit to the Reptile House (the world\u2019s first) in Regent\u2019s Park, and he does so in vivid and memorable terms:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>I once saw the snakes fed; the public are no longer allowed to see it, and quite rightly. There were about a dozen people in the snake-house, at the time, and I think we were all silent as we went out, when the feeding was over. The snake I watched was a live python from South America . . . and he was given a live rat, for they will not eat the dead food . . . it was horrible.<\/em><br \/>\n<em> It was many years since I saw that sight. It was, I think, the most terrifying thing I ever beheld. In sleep, the horror of it sometimes still reaches me. I am in a dim unfamiliar room, alone at first, but as I sit there, something wakes into existence which is horrible, evil, not understood, and I cannot get away.<\/em> (158-60)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Randy Malamud comments on the power of this passage and links it to a wider discourse of animal domination: the point \u201cis not that animals eating is disgusting; obviously it is a fundamental facet of natural behavior. But something seems askew, inappropriate, about feeding rituals as they occur at the zoo, and about spectators\u2019 presence . . . what happens in zoos is essentially not about animals but about people . . . it is about us in disturbing ways\u201d (233). What disturbs us in this image is a sense of things that should not be seen, or at least of things that should not be seen in the way that captivity allows for, that is, unnaturally. Our desire to see snakes or lions eating, however, has something to do with our desire for certain sorts of knowledge, or certain sorts of self definition.<\/p>\n<p>The nineteenth-century tradition of animal display grows even more sinister when we realize, quoting Malamud again, that \u201czoos, carnivals, freak shows and other traditions of human displays represent a continuum of spectatorial attractions with a related heritage\u201d (85). Richard Altick lists numerous human exhibitions that blurred the distinction between humans and animal species: a Botocudo Indian exhibited as \u201cthe Venus of South America\u201d in 1832 as well as the more famous \u201cHottentot Venus\u201d before 1820, groups of Laplanders (1822), African \u201cBushmen (1847), American Ojibbeway Indians (1843) and \u201cAztec Lilliputians\u201d (1853). The desire for spectacle led to the exhibition of humans \u201cintertwined with captive animal displays\u201d in which all of the \u201ccreatures\u201d from distant locales might be exhibited together. Altick, in The Shows of London, devotes an entire chapter to forms of human display and \u201ccaptivity\u201d that were often linked to animal exhibition. The \u201cHottentot Venus\u201d was a South African woman named Sartje, later baptized Sarah Bartmann, who was displayed in a variety of inhuman conditions between 1810 and 1815: she was, in the horrified words of the secretary of the African Association, \u201cproduced like a wild beast, and ordered to move backwards and forwards and come out and go into her cage, more like a bear in a chain that a human being\u201d (quoted in Altick 270).\u00a0 The comparable \u201cVenus of South America\u201d was exhibited in Bond Street in 1822; as Altick notes, \u201cshe seems to have aroused no humanitarian emotions on the part of her beholders, only morbid (and latently sexual) curiosity and disgust\u201d (272). During the first half of the century Laplanders were displayed with reindeer and elk at the Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly, Ojibbeway Indians with horses at Vauxhall Gardens, and two bushmen children (15 and 8 years old) from South Africa, along with \u201cthe great ursine baboon\u201d and \u201csome exceedingly rare varieties of the monkey tribe\u201d (280). Robert Bogdan notes the link between human and animal display in the rise of the \u201cfreak show\u201d in America; he points out that the phrase \u201cliving curiosities\u201d was often used during the nineteenth century to refer both to animals and to humans on exhibition (26).<\/p>\n<p>This notion of exhibiting exotic humans along with animals suggests precisely the link between the privileged position of spectator (who is the looker? who, or what, is the subject of the looking?) and the very definition of words like \u201cprimitive,\u201d \u201csavage,\u201d \u201cnative,\u201d and \u201cnatural.\u201d\u00a0 My definition of the things I see depends on the settings in which I see them. A lion in a cage is a different creature than a lion on the African savannah. A person in a cage is no longer fully human. If I am the spectator, then I get to say what it is that I see; the subject of my observation does not have the same privilege or authority, particularly if that subject is not human, or is not defined as human. \u201cSpectacle,\u201d in this sense, is often about self definition (\u201cwho am I in relation to this spectacle?\u201d) and about my definition of the other (\u201cwho is this other [person, animal, or in our own day this putative space-alien perhaps?] in relation to me\u201d). Zoos catch human beings in acts of self-reflexive spectating with important implications for our definition of the \u201cother.\u201d Creatures in cages exist, in some sense, for human \u201cconsumption.\u201d Creatures in the wild, by contrast, and importantly for my argument, do not necessarily exist for anyone\u2019s benefit.<\/p>\n<p>By the end of the century (1897), Bram Stoker leaves us with an image of zoos that links humans with animals in a way that can serve as a close to the present reflections. Count Dracula, in the guise of a wolf, liberates an actual gray wolf (appropriately named Berserker) from his pen at the Regent\u2019s Park zoo, in the telling words of Stoker\u2019s cockney zoo-keeper: \u201cwhen I kem opposite to old Bersicker\u2019s cage I see the rails broken and twisted about and the cage empty . . . it seems to me that \u2019ere wolf escaped\u2013simply because he wanted to get out\u201d (178). Dracula needs the strength of this animal to help him break into the house of his next victim: a wolf aiding a vampire, what a spectacular mix! Even before the age when animal liberationists would free captive animals for ethical reasons, Stoker leaves us with the shuddering sense that if the animals in the zoo ever get out . . . well . . . I will leave it to others to consider the ways that animals\u2013caged or otherwise&#8211;continue to be used as forms of titillation and spectacle in our own &#8220;humane&#8221; and &#8220;civilized&#8221; century.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Works Cited<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Altick, Richard D. <em>The Shows of London<\/em>. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard UP, 1978.<\/p>\n<p>Malamud, Randy. Reading Zoos: <em>Representations of Animals and Captivity<\/em>. New York: New York UP, 1998.<\/p>\n<p>Ritvo, Harriet. <em>The Animal Estate: The English and Other Creatures in the Victorian Age<\/em>. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP, 1987.<\/p>\n<p>___________. \u201cThe Order of Nature: Constructing the Collections of Victorian Zoos,\u201d in <em>New Worlds, New Animals: From Menagerie to Zoological Park in the Nineteenth Century<\/em>, ed. R. J. Hoage and William A. Deiss Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1996.<\/p>\n<p>Wolf, Leonard, ed. <em>The Essential Dracula<\/em>. New York: Plume\/Penguin, 1993.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Ashton Nichols &nbsp; If you could have seen what it was like when I was a boy\u2013half zoo and half museum, my father let us do anything we wanted. For a while we had a big tree in the &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/2011\/06\/10\/romantic-rhinos-and-victorian-vipers-the-zoo-as-nineteenth-century-spectacle\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":823,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[33105],"tags":[2745,33194,33154,33114,33153],"class_list":["post-672","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-more-topics","tag-animals","tag-exploration","tag-rhinoceros","tag-snakes","tag-zoo"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/672","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/823"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=672"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/672\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=672"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=672"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.dickinson.edu\/romnat\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=672"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}