《一个毛茸茸的故事:18世纪的白化病与种族

Sarah-Maria Schober
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摘要

德国解剖学家和人类学家约翰·弗里德里希·布鲁门巴赫(1752-1840)除了非常出名的人类头骨收藏外,他还是一个狂热的人类头发收藏家。迄今为止,Blumenbach的头发样本在很大程度上被历史研究所忽视,但事实证明,它对18世纪种族观念的形成具有重要意义。在这些样本中,有7个白化头发样本脱颖而出。直到18世纪晚期,白化病一直被认为是一种异乎寻常的欧洲以外的“白人黑人”现象。因此,白化病深深嵌入了种族理论的进化中。然而,布鲁门巴赫通过头发样本收集的证据指向了另一种解释:对布鲁门巴赫来说,白化病是一种疾病,并不构成不同的人类品种。因此,这并没有挑战他关于人类五种的理论。本文将论证布卢门巴赫处理皮肤和头发异常白皙的人的所谓更“科学”的方法确实培养了他的种族思想体系。通过将他对头发和头骨等解剖学问题的观察分为人类学和解剖学两个领域,Blumenbach成功地绕过了“白人黑人”的“问题”,将其作为一种疾病与他对人类进行人类学分类的尝试分开。因此,Blumenbach的白化头发样本的故事完全符合18世纪生命科学形成的背景。它不仅证明了解剖学家和人类学家之间的学科差异,也证明了科学中正在进行的种族纠缠。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Hairy Tale: Eighteenth-Century Strands of Albinism and Race
Besides his extraordinarily well-known collection of human skulls, the German anatomist and anthropologist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752–1840) was an avid collector of human hair. Largely overlooked by historical research so far, Blumenbach’s samples of hair prove highly significant in the formation of eighteenth-century ideas about race. Among the samples, seven specimens of albino hair stand out. Up until the late eighteenth century, albinism had been understood as a singularly extra-European phenomenon of “white Negroes.” As such, albinism became deeply embedded in the evolution of theories of race. The evidence collected by Blumenbach through hair samples pointed, however, to another explanation: for Blumenbach, albinism was an illness and did not constitute a different human variety. Therefore, it did not challenge his theory about five human races. This article will argue that Blumenbach’s supposedly more “scientific” way of dealing with people with extraordinarily fair skin and hair did indeed foster his system of racial thought. By splitting up his observations on anatomical things like hair and skulls into the two realms of anthropology and anatomy, Blumenbach succeeded in bypassing the “problem” of the “white Negro” by separating it as an illness apart from his attempt to categorize humans anthropologically. The story of Blumenbach’s albino hair samples therefore fits perfectly into the context of the formation of the life sciences in the eighteenth century. It provides proof not only of a disciplinary differentiation between anatomists and anthropologists but also of the ongoing racial entanglement of the sciences.
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