Bad Mothers and Strange Offspring: Images of Scrubfowl and Sea Turtles in Eastern Indonesia

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
G. Forth
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

One way birds communicate knowledge to humans and facilitate communication among humans is through metaphors. A recent book discusses animal metaphors, nearly a third of which employ birds as vehicles, used by the Nage people of Flores Island (eastern Indonesia). As applied to human beings and human behaviors, bird metaphors reveal considerable overlap with other animal metaphors; thus, a full understanding of these requires additional attention to the metaphoric or more generally symbolic value of other sorts of non-human animals. Emphasizing how knowledge of birds is shaped in some degree by an extra-cultural empirical experience of the creatures, the present discussion explores similar representations of a bird, the scrubfowl, and a marine reptile, the sea turtle, among people in several parts of Flores. Received July 12, 2019 OPEN ACCESS Accepted October 28, 2019 DOI 10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1624 Published December 4, 2020
坏妈妈和奇怪的后代:印度尼西亚东部的砂鸡和海龟的图像
鸟类与人类交流知识和促进人类交流的一种方式是通过隐喻。最近的一本书讨论了弗洛雷斯岛(印度尼西亚东部)的纳吉人使用的动物隐喻,其中近三分之一使用鸟类作为载体。在应用于人类和人类行为时,鸟类隐喻与其他动物隐喻有相当大的重叠;因此,要想充分理解这些,就需要更多地关注其他种类的非人类动物的隐喻或更普遍的象征价值。本次讨论强调了鸟类的知识是如何在某种程度上由对这些生物的文化外经验形成的,探讨了弗洛雷斯几个地区的人们对鸟类、猫头鹰和海洋爬行动物海龟的相似表现。收到日期:2019年7月12日开放访问接受日期:2017年10月28日DOI 10.14237/bl.11.2.2020.1624发布日期:2020年12月4日
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
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审稿时长
16 weeks
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