Kinship, history, and descent

Keith W. Ray, Julian Thomas
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Abstract

For traditional societies, by which we mean those peoples whose worlds are permeated by kin relations and obligations, and among whom past societies such as those of Neolithic Britain are mostly to be counted, the most precious inheritance is knowledge. Inherited knowledge is of many kinds, the most overt of which is instrumental knowledge—how to make a rope from fibre, where to look for and how to utilize medicinal plants, and so on. Alongside this, however, is a plurality of less obvious but equally fundamental knowledges that include kinds of behavioural knowledge (in the sense of customs and prohibitions, for example), forms of discursive awareness (how to negotiate the social world; what to recall and recount as story and history), and understandings of esoteric beliefs and their concomitant ‘necessary’ actions. Collective cultural and customary knowledge, then, is a resource that makes possible the sustaining and renewal of human social relationships through time. There is a modern tendency to see history as a progression of tableaux, or a montage of scenes, a cavalcade; or, as we noted in Chapter 1, an ascent through measurable social evolutionary stages from relative cultural simplicity towards a present of multilayered complexity. In the modern world, history is expressed in the form of narratives that have been standardized and systematically ordered, and published in a diversity of media, as well as being contested by alternative perspectives in print and online. This contrasts with the way that knowledge and tradition are conveyed in societies that lack written literature, which generally takes the form of oral transmission. However, they are also expressed and fixed (however fleetingly) and transformed through the use of material items and material culture, including the built environment. For such societies, history may take the form of a shared memory of significant events, but these are always experienced and mediated through the filters of social relationships of dominance and subordination, and of kinship. This latter is composed of the shifting elements of genealogy, lineage, and descent, although any or all of these may be fictional in character, and open to a degree of manipulation.
亲属关系,历史和血统
对于传统社会来说,最宝贵的遗产是知识。传统社会指的是那些世界充满亲缘关系和义务的民族,而过去的社会,如新石器时代的英国,大多可以算在传统社会里。遗传的知识有很多种,其中最明显的是工具性知识——如何用纤维制作绳子,在哪里寻找和如何利用药用植物,等等。然而,除此之外,还有许多不太明显但同样基本的知识,包括各种行为知识(例如,在习俗和禁令的意义上),话语意识的形式(如何与社会世界谈判;作为故事和历史回忆和叙述的内容),以及对深奥信仰及其伴随的“必要”行动的理解。因此,集体文化和习俗知识是一种资源,使人类社会关系得以长期维持和更新。现在有一种趋势,把历史看作是一连串的场面,或者是一组蒙太奇式的场面,一列骑兵;或者,正如我们在第一章中提到的,从相对简单的文化到现在的多层次复杂性的可测量的社会进化阶段的上升。在现代世界,历史是以标准化和系统有序的叙述形式表达的,并在各种媒体上出版,同时也受到印刷和网络上其他观点的质疑。这与缺乏书面文学的社会中知识和传统的传播方式形成鲜明对比,后者通常采取口头传播的形式。然而,它们也通过使用物质物品和物质文化(包括建筑环境)来表达和固定(无论多么短暂)和转化。对于这样的社会来说,历史可能以对重大事件的共同记忆的形式出现,但这些都是通过支配和从属以及亲属关系的社会关系的过滤器来体验和调解的。后者由家谱、世系和血统等不断变化的元素组成,尽管这些元素中的任何一个或全部都可能是虚构的,并有一定程度的操纵空间。
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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