Bats in Folklore and Culture: A Review of Historical Perceptions around the World

Alan Sieradzki, H. Mikkola
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Belief systems of people have always been closely related to animals, which are symbolized in traditional narratives. Sociocultural definitions of animals as “good or evil” have persisted throughout the history of human beings. In the West, bats are often perceived as evil spirits, Vampires, and harbingers of death, while some cultures across the Asia-Pacific region associate bats with good fortune. Here, we review documented narratives and surveys from around the world and our ethnographic observations from Europe to analyze beliefs associated with bats. We explore the role that bats play in traditional narratives and the likely reasons for their salience, including their connections with the extraordinary and supernatural. Finally, we discuss shortly the need of education to change attitudes toward bats. In North America, education has had some effect as more people have started to understand how useful bats truly are and how few cases of bat-born rabies transmission to humans there have been in the United States and Canada . It remains to be seen, however, how effectively the further education efforts could halt or even reverse the decline of the bats around the world. It is also noted that bat tourism has a potential to conserve bat populations while providing social and economic benefits to local people in host communities.
民间传说和文化中的蝙蝠:对世界各地历史观念的回顾
人们的信仰体系一直与动物密切相关,动物在传统叙事中被符号化。社会文化对动物“善或恶”的定义贯穿人类历史。在西方,蝙蝠通常被视为邪恶的灵魂、吸血鬼和死亡的预兆,而亚太地区的一些文化则将蝙蝠与好运联系在一起。在这里,我们回顾了来自世界各地的文献叙述和调查,以及我们在欧洲的民族志观察,以分析与蝙蝠相关的信仰。我们探索蝙蝠在传统叙事中扮演的角色,以及它们突出的可能原因,包括它们与非凡和超自然的联系。最后,我们简短地讨论了通过教育来改变人们对蝙蝠的态度的必要性。在北美,教育已经产生了一些影响,因为越来越多的人开始了解蝙蝠的真正用处,以及在美国和加拿大,蝙蝠传播给人类的狂犬病病例是多么少。然而,进一步的教育工作如何有效地阻止甚至扭转世界各地蝙蝠数量的下降还有待观察。还应指出,蝙蝠旅游具有保护蝙蝠种群的潜力,同时为东道国社区的当地人民提供社会和经济利益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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