天生的刽子手?猎人如何维护超越人类的城市权利

E. von Essen, David Redmalm
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于人类和野生动物来说,城市地区是一个混乱的 "超越人类的界面"。什么是需要捕杀的 "问题 "动物,什么是需要救助的流离失所的动物,什么是必须让其存活的滋扰物种,这些规范都在发生着迅速的变化。我们调查了城市猎人在管理城市中的问题野生动物时从社会中获得的不断变化的期望。作为对有关人类环境中 "问题 "动物构成的文献的补充,我们展示了这些动物的实际情况,以及这一决定的依据。我们的出发点是询问猎人认为对城市自然进行致命干预是合法的,以及他们认为哪些干预在道德上是有问题的。在讨论中,我们反思了这对多物种共存的影响和意义。通过对瑞典 32 名城市猎人的访谈和参与观察,我们展示了城市猎人如何对他们被期望扮演的新监护人角色感到越来越不安,他们既是自然秩序的促进者,又是社会上不受欢迎的野生动物的垃圾收集者,还是城市物种间行为准则的执行者。基于这一分析,我们讨论了捕杀的补偿性、牺牲性、审美性、善意性、实用性、分类性和情境性理由的相对地位。这描绘了一幅猎人在控制城市自然方面矛盾重重的画面,与职业猎人是 "天生的捕杀者 "的刻板印象形成了挑战。它还展示了一个多物种共存的平行平面城市,在这个平面上,一些物种和动物比其他物种和动物更容易获得通行证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Natural born cullers? How hunters police the more-than-human right to the city
Urban areas are a messy more-than-human interface for humans and synanthropic wildlife. Norms for what constitutes a ‘problem’ animal to be culled, a displaced animal to be rescued, or a species nuisance whom one simply has to let live, are undergoing rapid change. We investigate the changing expectations that municipal hunters experience that they have from society in relation to managing problem wildlife in cities. Adding to the literature on the constitution of ‘problem’ animals in human environments, we show what happens to these animals in the practical sense, and what informs this decision. Our point of departure is to ask by what rationales hunters consider lethal interventions in urban nature to be legitimate, and which they find to be morally problematic. In a discussion, we reflect on what this says about, and means for, multispecies coexistence. Through interviews and go-along participant observation with 32 municipal hunters in Sweden, we show how municipal hunters wrestle with growing unease about new custodial roles they are expected to inhabit, as facilitators of the natural order, as garbage collectors of society for unwanted wildlife, and as enforcers of an interspecies code of conduct for the city. Based on this analysis, we discuss the relative standing of reparative, sacrificial, aesthetic, goodwill, practical, categorical and situational rationales for culling. This paints a picture of hunters as more conflicted about their control of urban nature, in challenge with the stereotypical idea of the professional hunter as a ‘natural born culler’. It also shows a city of parallel planes of multispecies coexistence, where some species and animals get a pass more than others.
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