Creatures of Fashion: Animals, Global Markets, and the Transformation of Patagonia by John Soluri. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 2024. 272 pp. $27.95 (pbk); $99.00 (hbk); $21.99 (e-book). ISBN: 978-1-4696-7572-5; ISBN: 97814696-7571-8; ISBN: 97814696-7573-2

IF 2.4 2区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Mercedes Ejarque
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This criterion also defined animals and populations: While native inhabitants and the dogs that accompanied them needed to be eradicated, the European migrants, their pedigree dogs and their culture were more than welcome to settle.</p><p>‘The Labor of Reproduction’, the third chapter, examines the extensive sheep farming model of production and the mechanisms through which it achieved reproduction. In this way, the author examines the processes of selection and refinement to which the animal population was subjected to meet the demands of global markets and adapt to environmental conditions. Wire fencing represents an additional method of ensuring animal reproduction in a manner that is well suited to capital interests. In concluding this chapter, the author develops the concept of a mixed labour force by also valorising the participation of dogs and horses in livestock work. ‘This triad of migrant men, horses, and dogs was crucial for carrying out the routine work that enabled the profitable reproduction of sheep’ (Soluri <span>2024</span>, 9). As it has been seen, the commodification of animals and the associated technologies lay the foundations for the implementation of an agrarian development model. But this model not only implied the abandonment of violence to animals and social groups but also generated the conditions for its eventual downfall.</p><p>Social and environmental inequalities can also be identified within the clothing industry and markets. Chapter 4, ‘The Work of Fashion’, outlines the journey of fibres from Patagonia to the global hubs of fashion. It examines the diversification and specialisation of fibres, their differential valuation and how they impact primary production. In this way, <i>punta wool</i> journey from the shearing sheds and the work of animals and migrant men to retail stores shows that its value did not come just from Patagonia: It was challenged by a persisting animality, by ideas of health and fashion related to wool and changes in labour and factories.</p><p>The hunting of wild animals for their pelts continued throughout this period of imposition of a pastoral economy. Chapter 5, entitled ‘The Wild Side’, is specifically dedicated to the study of wildlife and the impacts it suffered as a direct consequence of the implementation of the wool model. It introduces the particularities of the hunting of <i>guanacos</i>, which was primarily focused on the use of their skins, particularly those of young animals (<i>guanaquitos</i>). This practice was eventually prohibited due to the identification of the <i>guanaco</i> and other wild animals as a pest that threatened sheep production. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Desert … remoteness … the end of the world … are some of the ways in which the history of the Patagonian region, in the extreme south of the American continent, has been characterised. In recent decades, this narrative has been challenged and reinterpreted by a new generation of regional historians employing diverse approaches and analytical perspectives. These scholars have endeavoured to transcend geographical and political boundaries, integrate the historical processes of the region with global dynamics, contextualise the narratives of individual and family biographies within the dominant social groups and recognise and value the presence of indigenous populations in the construction of social history (Bandieri 2021; López and Gattica 2000). Likewise, Patagonia has been the focus of an increasing number of studies that seek to transcend the conventional boundaries of agrarian history, with the aim of (re)constructing an environmental history that examines the intricate relationships and conflicts between production and the exploitation of nature (Andrade 2003; Blanco and Mendes 2006; Ejarque 2014; Haller 2023).

In this context, Creatures of Fashion represents a significant contribution to both fields of study. The book proposes a reconstruction of the history of the southernmost extremity of the continent (currently Argentinean and Chilean territories) by examining the impact of the commodification of animals (native and exotic) on the relations between society and nature, as well as between the social groups that inhabited the area. In the process, it illuminates how nation states established administrative territories that extended well beyond the boundaries of the nation-state system itself.

This book will enrich the historiography of Patagonia in at least two ways. Firstly, its approach is expanded to involve the analysis of the diversity of animals present in the region and their relations (and tensions) established with local and global societies. These links included breeding for productive purposes; the exploitation of wildlife for commercial gain; the recognition of some native species as part of the pristine landscape and their preservation through conservation mechanisms; and the role of domestic animals as part of the social reproduction of the people who worked in livestock activities. The second contribution of the book is that it moves beyond the agrarian perspective to examine the impact of the world of consumption of fibres and skins on the social relations of production. This is achieved by adopting a ‘from the field to the hanger’ approach. Consequently, although the author acknowledges that commodification does not encompass the myriads of relations between animals and people in Patagonia, it is the most impactful phenomenon and enables him to illustrate ‘how certain individuals acquired power from and over specific species of animals’ (Soluri 2024, 2). Thus, the exploitations of both animals and people are articulated, seeking to prioritise the socio-historical construction of both over their biological definitions.

Creatures of Fashion is a book written by Professor John Soluri, who has an extensive background in the study of Latin American environmental history and decades-long experience conducting research and living in Patagonia. The book is the result of extensive archival work, not only in the United States but also in different parts of Argentina and Chile, in which a range of previously untapped sources have been recovered, including travellers' diaries, newspapers, government documents and photographs.

In addition to the introduction and epilogue, the book comprises six chapters that, although presented in chronological order, address problematic topics that were most developed at a particular historical moment but whose effects are still evident today.

Chapter 1, entitled ‘Birthplaces’, identifies the initial phase of animal exploitation by the capitalist economy, focusing on the hunting of fur seals for their hides in the late 19th century. It demonstrates the transition from a society structured around a prison (a penal colony) to one based on fishing and hunting. In the latter, the animal life cycles, the differential valuation of fur types and the violence (and more indirect forms such as spreading diseases) towards Yamana populations were central in developing a productive model that extracted resources without investing in social and animal reproduction.

The subsequent chapters concentrate on two further animals, the sheep and the dog. This approach is fundamental to the authors' view of environmental history, as it implies not only the reconstruction of the process of social construction but also of animalities.

Chapter 2, called ‘Displacements’, describes the violence of the introduction of extensive sheep farming on the indigenous populations, their animals and the habitats in which they reproduced. It addresses the ways in which the criteria of civilisation shaped practices, mobilities and governmental actions in the area. This criterion also defined animals and populations: While native inhabitants and the dogs that accompanied them needed to be eradicated, the European migrants, their pedigree dogs and their culture were more than welcome to settle.

‘The Labor of Reproduction’, the third chapter, examines the extensive sheep farming model of production and the mechanisms through which it achieved reproduction. In this way, the author examines the processes of selection and refinement to which the animal population was subjected to meet the demands of global markets and adapt to environmental conditions. Wire fencing represents an additional method of ensuring animal reproduction in a manner that is well suited to capital interests. In concluding this chapter, the author develops the concept of a mixed labour force by also valorising the participation of dogs and horses in livestock work. ‘This triad of migrant men, horses, and dogs was crucial for carrying out the routine work that enabled the profitable reproduction of sheep’ (Soluri 2024, 9). As it has been seen, the commodification of animals and the associated technologies lay the foundations for the implementation of an agrarian development model. But this model not only implied the abandonment of violence to animals and social groups but also generated the conditions for its eventual downfall.

Social and environmental inequalities can also be identified within the clothing industry and markets. Chapter 4, ‘The Work of Fashion’, outlines the journey of fibres from Patagonia to the global hubs of fashion. It examines the diversification and specialisation of fibres, their differential valuation and how they impact primary production. In this way, punta wool journey from the shearing sheds and the work of animals and migrant men to retail stores shows that its value did not come just from Patagonia: It was challenged by a persisting animality, by ideas of health and fashion related to wool and changes in labour and factories.

The hunting of wild animals for their pelts continued throughout this period of imposition of a pastoral economy. Chapter 5, entitled ‘The Wild Side’, is specifically dedicated to the study of wildlife and the impacts it suffered as a direct consequence of the implementation of the wool model. It introduces the particularities of the hunting of guanacos, which was primarily focused on the use of their skins, particularly those of young animals (guanaquitos). This practice was eventually prohibited due to the identification of the guanaco and other wild animals as a pest that threatened sheep production. The chapter also presents a reconstruction of the contradictory policies that permitted, regulated and prohibited hunting, with justifications that demonstrated the tension between domestic livestock production, the natural ecological balance and the demands of fashion.

The abuse of wildlife and the consequences of certain agrarian models became part of the global public agenda in the 1970s. Chapter 6, ‘Making a Place for Guanacos’, illustrates how transformations in landownership in Chile, shifts in the global fibre market (driven not only by the emergence of synthetic textiles but also by the standardisation of clothing and changes in the associations attached to each fabric), tourism and the establishment of protected natural areas have shaped and (re)defined the material and symbolic role of native fauna in the recent history of Patagonia. The analysis demonstrates the impact of policies and fibre markets on the decline of the wool model and commercial hunting while simultaneously illustrating the growing significance of tourism (linked to scientific research) in natural areas. Even though the book does not examine the geopolitical objectives of national park strategies as a means of reinforcing national borders between Chile and Argentina (Caruso 2015; Navarro Floria 2008), it considers how conservation gave new means of linking animals and people in Patagonia with transnational networks and markets. This transformation has not happened without contention, new forms of violence and differential valuation of species and social groups. As Andrade, Paredes, and Riquelme observe in the Argentinian province of Santa Cruz, it still creates a ‘tension of territorialities’ (2023, 13).

Creatures of Fashion accomplishes its objective of transporting readers not only to Patagonia's remotest boundaries but also to a critical examination of the ways in which environmental inequalities are reproduced and how the lessons of the past can be employed to advocate for environmental justice in processes that are currently underway. As Soluri asserts, ‘people and animals in Patagonia continue to be entangled in transboundary networks whose power operates in crosscutting ways’ (Soluri 2024, 182).

《时尚生物:动物、全球市场和巴塔哥尼亚的转变》作者:约翰·索鲁里教堂山:北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2024。272页,27.95美元(每磅);99.00美元(hbk);21.99美元(电子书)。ISBN: 978-1-4696-7572-5;ISBN: 97814696-7571-8;ISBN: 97814696-7573-2
沙漠、偏远、世界末日,这些都是巴塔哥尼亚地区的历史特征,它位于美洲大陆的最南端。近几十年来,新一代的地区历史学家采用不同的方法和分析视角,对这种叙述进行了挑战和重新诠释。这些学者努力超越地理和政治界限,将该地区的历史进程与全球动态相结合,将占主导地位的社会群体中的个人和家庭传记叙事置于背景中,并承认和重视土著人口在社会历史建设中的存在(Bandieri 2021;López和Gattica 2000)。同样,巴塔哥尼亚已经成为越来越多的研究的焦点,这些研究试图超越农业历史的传统界限,目的是(重新)构建一个环境史,检查生产与自然剥削之间的复杂关系和冲突(Andrade 2003;Blanco and Mendes 2006;Ejarque 2014;哈勒2023)。在这种背景下,《时尚生物》对这两个研究领域都做出了重大贡献。这本书通过考察动物(本地和外来)商品化对社会与自然关系的影响,以及居住在该地区的社会群体之间的关系,提出了非洲大陆最南端(目前为阿根廷和智利领土)历史的重建。在这个过程中,它阐明了民族国家如何建立远远超出民族国家系统本身边界的行政领土。这本书将丰富巴塔哥尼亚的历史编纂至少在两个方面。首先,它的方法扩展到包括分析该地区存在的动物多样性以及它们与当地和全球社会建立的关系(和紧张关系)。这些联系包括以生产为目的的育种;为商业利益而开发野生动物;承认一些本地物种是原始景观的一部分,并通过保育机制加以保护;家畜在从事畜牧业的人们的社会再生产中所扮演的角色。本书的第二个贡献是,它超越了农业的视角,考察了纤维和兽皮消费世界对社会生产关系的影响。这是通过采用“从现场到悬挂器”的方法实现的。因此,尽管作者承认商品化并不包括巴塔哥尼亚动物和人之间的无数关系,但它是最具影响力的现象,使他能够说明“某些个体如何从特定动物物种中获得权力”(Soluri 2024, 2)。因此,动物和人的剥削都是明确的,寻求优先考虑两者的社会历史建设,而不是他们的生物学定义。《时尚生物》一书的作者是John Soluri教授,他在拉丁美洲环境史研究方面有着广泛的背景,并在巴塔哥尼亚进行了数十年的研究和生活。这本书是广泛的档案工作的结果,不仅在美国,而且在阿根廷和智利的不同地区,一系列以前未开发的资源已经恢复,包括旅行者的日记,报纸,政府文件和照片。除了引言和结语外,本书还包括六章,虽然按时间顺序呈现,但讨论了在特定历史时刻最发达但其影响今天仍然明显的问题主题。第一章,题为“诞生地”,确定了资本主义经济对动物剥削的初始阶段,重点关注19世纪后期为获取兽皮而猎杀海豹的行为。它展示了从一个以监狱(流放地)为中心的社会向一个以捕鱼和狩猎为基础的社会的转变。在后者中,动物的生命周期、对皮毛种类的不同估价和对Yamana种群的暴力(以及传播疾病等更间接的形式)是发展一种生产模式的核心,这种模式在不投资于社会和动物繁殖的情况下提取资源。接下来的章节集中于另外两种动物,羊和狗。这种方法是作者环境历史观的基础,因为它不仅意味着对社会建设过程的重建,而且意味着对动物的重建。第二章名为“流离失所”,描述了大规模牧羊对土著居民、他们的动物和他们繁殖的栖息地造成的暴力。 它阐述了文明的标准是如何塑造该地区的实践、流动性和政府行为的。这一标准也定义了动物和种群:虽然当地居民和陪伴他们的狗需要被消灭,但欧洲移民、他们的纯种狗和他们的文化非常受欢迎。第三章“再生产的劳动”,考察了粗放的羊养殖生产模式和实现再生产的机制。通过这种方式,作者考察了动物种群为满足全球市场需求和适应环境条件而进行选择和改良的过程。铁丝网围栏代表了另一种确保动物繁殖的方法,这种方式非常适合资本利益。在本章的结尾,作者通过强调狗和马在畜牧工作中的参与,发展了混合劳动力的概念。“迁徙的男人、马和狗这三合组合对于完成日常工作至关重要,从而实现羊的盈利繁殖”(Soluri 2024, 9)。正如我们所看到的,动物的商品化和相关技术为农业发展模式的实施奠定了基础。但这种模式不仅意味着放弃对动物和社会群体的暴力,而且也为其最终的垮台创造了条件。在服装行业和市场中也可以发现社会和环境不平等。第四章,“时尚的工作”,概述了从巴塔哥尼亚到全球时尚中心的纤维之旅。它审查了纤维的多样化和专业化,它们的不同估值以及它们如何影响初级生产。通过这种方式,蓬塔羊毛从剪羊毛棚、动物和移民到零售商店的历程表明,它的价值不仅仅来自巴塔哥尼亚:它受到了持续存在的动物、与羊毛有关的健康和时尚观念以及劳动力和工厂变化的挑战。狩猎野生动物以获取它们的皮毛在这一强加于畜牧经济的时期一直持续着。第五章,题为“野性的一面”,专门用于研究野生动物及其作为实施羊毛模型的直接后果所遭受的影响。它介绍了狩猎瓜纳科斯的特殊性,主要集中在它们的皮的使用上,特别是那些年轻的动物(瓜纳科斯)。这种做法最终被禁止,因为瓜纳瓜和其他野生动物被认定为威胁绵羊生产的害虫。本章还对允许、管制和禁止狩猎的相互矛盾的政策进行了重建,并论证了国内畜牧生产、自然生态平衡和时尚需求之间的紧张关系。虐待野生动物和某些农业模式的后果在20世纪70年代成为全球公共议程的一部分。第6章,“为瓜纳科斯创造一个地方”,说明了智利土地所有权的转变,全球纤维市场的转变(不仅受到合成纺织品的出现的推动,还受到服装标准化和与每种织物相关的变化的推动),旅游业和自然保护区的建立如何塑造和(重新)定义了巴塔哥尼亚近期历史中本土动物的物质和象征作用。该分析显示了政策和纤维市场对羊毛模型和商业狩猎下降的影响,同时说明了自然地区旅游业(与科学研究相关)的重要性日益增加。尽管这本书没有研究国家公园战略的地缘政治目标,作为加强智利和阿根廷之间国界的一种手段(Caruso 2015;Navarro Floria 2008),它考虑了保护如何提供将巴塔哥尼亚的动物和人与跨国网络和市场联系起来的新手段。这种转变并非没有争论、新形式的暴力以及对物种和社会群体的不同评价。正如安德拉德、帕雷德斯和里克尔梅在阿根廷圣克鲁斯省观察到的那样,它仍然造成了“领土紧张”(2023,13)。《时尚生物》不仅将读者带到了巴塔哥尼亚最遥远的边界,而且还将读者带到了对环境不平等再现方式的批判性审视,以及如何利用过去的经验教训,在目前正在进行的过程中倡导环境正义。正如Soluri所断言的那样,“巴塔哥尼亚的人和动物继续纠缠在跨界网络中,这些网络的权力以横切的方式运作”(Soluri 2024, 182)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.00%
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Agrarian Change is a journal of agrarian political economy. It promotes investigation of the social relations and dynamics of production, property and power in agrarian formations and their processes of change, both historical and contemporary. It encourages work within a broad interdisciplinary framework, informed by theory, and serves as a forum for serious comparative analysis and scholarly debate. Contributions are welcomed from political economists, historians, anthropologists, sociologists, political scientists, economists, geographers, lawyers, and others committed to the rigorous study and analysis of agrarian structure and change, past and present, in different parts of the world.
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