In1956, four years before Jane Goodall ventured into the world of chimpanzees and seven years before Dian Fossey left to work with mountain gorillas, in fact, before anyone, man or woman had made such a trip, 23-year old Canadian biologist, Anne Innis Dagg, made an unprecedented solo journey to South Africa to become the first person in the world to study animal behavior in the wild on that continent. When she returned home a year later armed with ground-breaking research, the insurmountable barriers she faced as a female scientist proved much harder to overcome. In 1972, having published 20 research papers as an assistant professor of zoology at University of Guelph, the Dean of the university, denied her tenure. She couldn't apply to the University of Waterloo because the Dean there told Anne that he would never give tenure to a married woman. This was the catalyst that transformed Anne into a feminist activist. For three decades, Anne Innis Dagg was absent from the giraffe world until 2010 when she was sought out by giraffologists and not just brought back to into the fold, but finally celebrated for her work.
长颈鹿打架太好笑了
“ an honor that recognizes those who have a made a notewor‐thy and significant contribution to giraffe worldwide in an unprecedented way.”
爱你所爱,在爱的场域里遇到那些终将遇见的人,而时光的计数是十年,二十年,也或者正是一辈子,赞,安妮精神~感动到流了许多眼泪~
拍得太个人宣传片了 (虽然值得宣传!)
看睡了幾次 紀錄片的形式有很多 缺少硬貨的話 尤其犯睏 毀了這麼好的海報