A (Dis)entangled History of Early Modern Cannibalism: Theory and Practice in Global History

Q2 Arts and Humanities
S. McManus, Michael T. Tworek
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract This article offers a new approach to early modern global history, dubbed (dis)entangled history as a way to combine the conventional focus on the history of connections with a necessary appreciation of the elements of disconnection and disintegration. To exemplify this approach, it offers a case study related to the history of cannibalism as both a disputed anthropophagic practice and a cultural reference point across the early modern world. Through a rich multilingual and multimedia source base, we trace how the idea of Indigenous Tapuya endo-cannibalism in Brazil travelled across the Atlantic through Europe and Africa to East Asia. The idea of Tapuya cannibalism crossed some linguistic borders, stopped at others and interacted unevenly with long-standing Ottoman, Polish, West African, Islamic and Chinese ideas about ‘cannibal countries’, of which it was just one more example. This trajectory challenges the historiographical consensus that early modern ideas about cannibalism were centred on the Atlantic world. By tracing how one particular discourse did and did not travel around the globe, this article offers not just a theoretical statement, but a ‘fleshed out’ and concrete approach to writing about intermittent connectedness during the period 1500–1800.
近代早期食人史:全球历史的理论与实践
摘要:本文提出了一种研究早期现代全球史的新方法,称为(解)纠缠史,它将传统的对联系史的关注与对断开和解体要素的必要认识结合起来。为了举例说明这种方法,它提供了一个与同类相食的历史相关的案例研究,作为一种有争议的食人行为和贯穿早期现代世界的文化参考点。通过丰富的多语言和多媒体资源库,我们追溯了巴西土著塔普亚人食人的想法是如何穿越大西洋,通过欧洲和非洲到达东亚的。塔普亚人吃人的想法跨越了一些语言的边界,在其他地方止步不前,并与长期存在的奥斯曼、波兰、西非、伊斯兰和中国关于“吃人国家”的想法不平衡地互动,这只是其中的一个例子。这一轨迹挑战了史学上的共识,即早期现代关于同类相食的观点集中在大西洋世界。通过追踪一个特定的话语是如何在全球范围内传播的,这篇文章不仅提供了一个理论陈述,而且提供了一个“充实”和具体的方法来写作1500-1800年间的间歇性联系。
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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来源期刊
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: The Royal Historical Society has published the highest quality scholarship in history for over 150 years. A subscription includes a substantial annual volume of the Society’s Transactions, which presents wide-ranging reports from the front lines of historical research by both senior and younger scholars, and two volumes from the Camden Fifth Series, which makes available to a wider audience valuable primary sources that have hitherto been available only in manuscript form.
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