Why Monsters Are Dangerous

IF 0.8 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Olivier Morin, Oleg Sobchuk
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Abstract

Monsters and other imaginary animals have been conjured up by a wide range of cultures. Can their popularity be explained, and can their properties be predicted? These were long-standing questions for structuralist or cognitive anthropology, as well as literary studies and cultural evolution. The task is to solve the puzzle raised by the popularity of extraordinary imaginary animals, and to explain some cross-cultural regularities that such animals present—traits like hybridity or dangerousness. The standard approach to this question was to first investigate how human imagination deals with actually existing animals. Structuralist theory held that some animals are particularly “good to think with.” According to Mary Douglas's influential hypothesis, this was chiefly true of animals that disrupt intuitive classifications of species—the “monsters-as-anomalies” account. But this hypothesis is problematic, as ethnobiology shows that folk classifications of biological species are so plastic that classificatory anomalies can be disregarded. This led cognitive anthropologists to propose alternative versions of the “monsters as anomalies” account. Parallel to this, a second account of monsters—“monsters-as-predators”—starts from the importance of predator detection to our past survival and reproduction, and argues that dangerous features make animals “good to think with,” and should be overrepresented in imaginary animals. This article argues that both accounts understand something about monsters that the other account cannot explain. We propose a synthesis of these two accounts that attempts to explain why the two most characteristic aspects of monsters, anomalousness and predatoriness, tend to go together.
怪物为何危险
各种文化都曾创造出怪兽和其他想象中的动物。它们的流行是否可以解释,它们的特性是否可以预测?这些都是结构主义人类学或认知人类学以及文学研究和文化进化论的长期问题。我们的任务是解决非凡想象动物的流行所带来的难题,并解释这类动物所呈现出的一些跨文化规律性--如混杂性或危险性等特征。解决这一问题的标准方法是首先研究人类的想象力是如何处理实际存在的动物的。结构主义理论认为,有些动物特别 "适合思考"。根据玛丽-道格拉斯(Mary Douglas)颇具影响力的假说,这种情况主要发生在那些破坏物种直观分类的动物身上--"作为异常现象的怪物"(monsters-as-anomalies)。但这一假说是有问题的,因为民族生物学表明,民间对生物物种的分类是可塑的,以至于分类异常可以被忽略。这就促使认知人类学家提出了 "怪兽是反常现象 "观点的替代版本。与此并行的是关于怪兽的第二种说法--"怪兽--作为捕食者"--从捕食者的侦测对我们过去的生存和繁衍的重要性出发,认为危险的特征使动物 "适合思考",并应在想象的动物中得到充分体现。本文认为,这两种观点都理解了另一种观点无法解释的关于怪兽的一些东西。我们对这两种观点进行了综合,试图解释为什么怪兽的两个最大特征--反常性和掠食性--往往同时存在。
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来源期刊
POETICS TODAY
POETICS TODAY LITERATURE-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
20.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: International Journal for Theory and Analysis of Literature and Communication Poetics Today brings together scholars from throughout the world who are concerned with developing systematic approaches to the study of literature (e.g., semiotics and narratology) and with applying such approaches to the interpretation of literary works. Poetics Today presents a remarkable diversity of methodologies and examines a wide range of literary and critical topics. Several thematic review sections or special issues are published in each volume, and each issue contains a book review section, with article-length review essays.
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