“Vida Zoo-cial is a creative and compelling social, cultural, and urban history of a central institution in modern Buenos Aires. Kerr describes and documents the historical significance of the zoo and its resonance with larger themes in turn-of-the-century Argentina, including public health campaigns; labor conditions and class relations; immigration and racial questions; gender expectations; family structures and heteronormativity; and nationalism and political conflict.”—Julia Rodriguez, author of Civilizing Argentina: Science, Medicine, and the Modern State