Visual representations of dromedaries in Greco-Roman antiquity and the middle ages: Imagining the other before orientalism

IF 1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Mathilde Sauquet
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The diorama Lion Attacking a Dromedary found in the Carnegie Museum of Natural History rightfully belongs to an Orientalist artistic tradition that crystallized many of the discriminatory misrepresentations of people of color that have plagued our society to this day. Camels and dromedaries, associated with the “Orient,” constituted an integral element of the exotic vision held and disseminated by Europeans. The motif of the camel and its dark-skinned rider, however, emerged many centuries prior to the context of colonial Europe and across media. This paper explores the surfacing and subsequent proliferation of the camel as a symbol of otherness and foreignness in Antiquity and the Middle Ages in relation to Christian and imperial ideologies. I argue that the material evidence points to a long-standing associative combination of the camel with people of color and/or of foreign origin and thus establishes a precedent worth our attention as we continue to wrestle with the racial and political ramifications of Lion Attacking a Dromedary.

Abstract Image

希腊罗马古代和中世纪的德罗姆达里斯的视觉表现:在东方主义之前想象另一个
卡内基自然历史博物馆发现的狮子攻击单峰骆驼的立体模型属于东方主义的艺术传统,它明确了许多对有色人种的歧视性歪曲,这些歪曲至今仍困扰着我们的社会。骆驼和单峰骆驼与“东方”联系在一起,构成了欧洲人持有和传播的异国情调的一个组成部分。然而,骆驼和它的深色皮肤的骑手的主题,在欧洲殖民背景和媒体之前出现了许多世纪。本文探讨了骆驼在古代和中世纪与基督教和帝国意识形态的关系中作为他者和异域的象征的出现和随后的扩散。我认为,物质证据表明,骆驼与有色人种和/或外国血统的人之间存在着长期的联系,因此,在我们继续与“狮子袭击单头骆驼”的种族和政治后果作斗争时,这一先例值得我们关注。
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来源期刊
Curator: The Museum Journal
Curator: The Museum Journal HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
10.00%
发文量
63
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