46 pages 1 hour read

Jane Goodall

My Life with the Chimpanzees

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Middle Grade | Published in 1988

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Themes

The Intersection of Personal Passion and Scientific Inquiry

Jane Goodall, whose fieldwork at Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania redefined dominant paradigms about chimpanzees and their relationship to humans, knew from an early age that she loved and wanted to study animals. This passion came to define her life and helped her carve out an unusual career path. Throughout My Life with the Chimpanzees, Goodall’s enthusiasm and dedication drive her forward, help her overcome challenges, and push her to make unique scientific discoveries.

While on her first expedition in Africa alongside Dr. Louis Leakey at Olduvai Gorge, Goodall realized that her dreams were finally coming true. She reflects, “I had never been so happy. There I was, far, far from any human dwellings, out in the wilds of Africa, with animals all around me in the night. Wild, free animals. That was what I had dreamed of all my life” (37). Goodall describes the overwhelming fulfillment and happiness of being in the Africa she had always dreamed of. Her emotional state, emphasizing joy and contentment, bares the deep personal satisfaction Goodall derives from pursuing her passion and how personal fulfillment can be intertwined with scientific work. The “wild, free animals” symbolize the core of Goodall’s motivations and the essence of her scientific inquiry: observing animals in their natural habitat.

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By Jane Goodall

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Jane Goodall, Douglas Abrams
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