Sources of Ambivalence, Contagion, and Sympathy

IF 2.1 1区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Frédéric Laugrand, Antoine Laugrand, Lionel Simon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The bat is often portrayed as a vampire, a taxonomic monstrosity, and a source of the worst evils. Whenever pandemics occur, such as the one currently spread by SARS-CoV-2, this animal is quickly identified as a “reservoir of emerging pathogens” and is among the first to be blamed. Yet many human groups live in daily contact with multiple bat species and eat their flesh, which they praise for its medicinal benefits. Such groups see the bat as a “companion species” with which they cohabit and establish cooperative relationships. In this paper, we use recently gathered ethnographic data from Southeast Asia to show how humans imagine bats and enter into relationships with them. By blurring the boundaries between nature and society, this animal has made itself an appropriate subject of study for contemporary anthropology.
矛盾、传染和同情的根源
蝙蝠经常被描绘成吸血鬼、分类学上的怪物和最邪恶的来源。每当流行病发生时,比如目前由严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2型传播的流行病,这种动物很快被确定为“新出现病原体的宿主”,并成为首批受到指责的动物之一。然而,许多人类群体每天都与多种蝙蝠物种接触,并以蝙蝠的肉为食,他们称赞蝙蝠的药用价值。这类群体将蝙蝠视为“伴侣物种”,与之同居并建立合作关系。在这篇论文中,我们使用最近从东南亚收集的民族志数据来展示人类如何想象蝙蝠并与它们建立关系。通过模糊自然和社会之间的界限,这种动物使自己成为当代人类学的合适研究对象。
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来源期刊
Current Anthropology
Current Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: Current Anthropology is a transnational journal devoted to research on humankind, encompassing the full range of anthropological scholarship on human cultures and on the human and other primate species. Communicating across the subfields, the journal features papers in a wide variety of areas, including social, cultural, and physical anthropology as well as ethnology and ethnohistory, archaeology and prehistory, folklore, and linguistics.
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