社会存在与文化习俗

Keith W. Ray, Julian Thomas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类社会是由关系、惯例、传统、制度和默契维系在一起的。这些东西都是无形的,虽然人类本身是作为物质存在被再生产的,但他们的社会是通过不断创造知识、习俗和人际关系的实践活动来维持的。正如一种语言如果不再被用作交流手段,它最终会消失一样,社会生活的规则和惯例只有在得到实践的情况下才能维持。这样做的必然结果是,社会并不是固定和有界限的实体,而是不断出现的安排,是永远不会完成的作品(如果你愿意的话)。但物质的东西也在不断变化,不断成熟,不断被制造,在它们的“寿命”中以不同的方式连续使用,侵蚀和腐烂:所以社会世界和物质世界是一体的,处于一种永无止境的形成状态。尽管如此,对象通常比习惯、规则或从属关系更持久。它们继续独立于人类和人类的行为而存在。因此,古老的人工制品和过去占据的地方可以为当前的实践和交易提供结构,提供线索和提示,或者提醒我们过去的事件和适当的行为模式。狩猎采集者的生活方式通常是不断地参考自然特征和地标。某些独特的悬崖、山丘、岛屿、树木和湖泊代表着返回的地方,或者安排会议或遇到游戏的地方。因此,它们将成为定期度假的地方,并被纳入集体历史和神话中。与此同时,其他地方获得了一个意义仅仅是因为特定的人在那里露营,或在那里相遇,或死在那里。在英国的中石器时代,一些地点似乎在很长一段时间内不断地被返回。其中一个例子是位于萨里郡布莱切利的北公园农场的遗址,在过去的几百年里,人们似乎偶尔会去那里参观,尽管该遗址的结构证据很少,仅限于一组壁炉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social being and cultural practices
Human societies are held together by relationships, conventions, traditions, institutions, and tacit understandings. These things are intangible, and while humans themselves are reproduced as corporeal beings, their societies are sustained by practical activities that continually recreate knowledge, customs, and interpersonal bonds. Just as a language would ultimately disappear if it ceased to be used as a means of communication, so the rules and routines of social life are maintained only if they are practised. The corollary of this is that societies are not fixed and bounded entities as much as arrangements that are continually coming into existence, works (if you like) that are never completed. But material things are also in flux, constantly ripening, maturing, being made, being used consecutively in different ways through their ‘lifespans’, eroding and decaying: so that the social and substantial worlds are as one in being in an unending state of becoming. Nonetheless, objects often have the capacity to endure longer than habits, rules, or affiliations. They continue to exist independently of human beings and their actions. As a result, old artefacts and places occupied in the past can serve to give structure to current practices and transactions, providing cues and prompts, or reminding us of past events and appropriate modes of conduct. Hunter-gatherers have generally lived a way of life that involves making continual reference to natural features and landmarks. Certain distinctive cliffs, hills, islands, trees, and lakes have represented places to return to, or at which to arrange meetings or encounter game. As such they will have been places of periodic resort, and were incorporated into collective history and mythology. Meanwhile, other places acquired a meaning simply because specific people camped there, or met there, or died there. During the Mesolithic in Britain, some locations seem to have been persistently returned to over very long periods of time. One example is the site at North Park Farm, Bletchingley in Surrey, which appears to have been visited sporadically over hundreds of years, although the structural evidence for this at the site was sparse, being limited to a group of fireplaces.
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