埃塞俄比亚索马里人消化的多物种社会性和腹部的微生物政治学。

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Medical Anthropology Pub Date : 2024-01-02 Epub Date: 2024-01-19 DOI:10.1080/01459740.2023.2293113
Lauren Carruth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

管理索马里人所谓的 "dacar"--译为消化胆汁、苦味、芦荟和肠道中的大量小生物--是埃塞俄比亚东部流行的健康文化和民族生理学的关键。管理体内的 dacar 需要培养多物种的社会性,以及人类、滋养牲畜的植被和因治疗和营养作用而产奶的动物之间的生命流动。索马里人的肠道认识论和 dacar 概念超越了西方科学对 "肠道微生物组 "的概念化和利用微生物改善人类健康的做法,为消化和生命本身的共建、易变和多物种性质提供了一个生态学视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Multispecies Sociality of Digestion and the Microbiopolitics of the Belly Among Somalis in Ethiopia.

Management of what Somalis call "dacar" - translated as digestive bile, bitterness, aloe, and masses of tiny beings in the gut - is key to popular health cultures and ethnophysiologies in eastern Ethiopia. Managing bodily dacar requires cultivating multispecies sociality and flows of life between humans, vegetation that nourishes livestock, and animals that produce milk consumed for therapeutic and nutritional properties. Transcending Western scientific conceptualizations of the "gut microbiome" and the instrumentalization of microbes to improve human health, Somalis' gut epistemologies and concept of dacar provide an ecological perspective on the co-constructed, mutable, and multispecies nature of digestion and life itself.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
4.30%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: Medical Anthropology provides a global forum for scholarly articles on the social patterns of ill-health and disease transmission, and experiences of and knowledge about health, illness and wellbeing. These include the nature, organization and movement of peoples, technologies and treatments, and how inequalities pattern access to these. Articles published in the journal showcase the theoretical sophistication, methodological soundness and ethnographic richness of contemporary medical anthropology. Through the publication of empirical articles and editorials, we encourage our authors and readers to engage critically with the key debates of our time. Medical Anthropology invites manuscripts on a wide range of topics, reflecting the diversity and the expanding interests and concerns of researchers in the field.
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