{"title":"封面和封底,第 40 卷第 4 号。2024 年 8 月","authors":"","doi":"10.1111/1467-8322.12807","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Front and back cover caption, volume 40 issue 4</p><p>VIETNAMESE UNDERGROUND LOTTERY</p><p>The front cover image captures the essence of Vietnam's underground lottery game, đề. Central to the scene are runners and bookies, the critical intermediaries in this illegal yet persistent practice. In a bustling urban setting, people gather to watch lottery draws, discuss numbers and place bets.</p><p>Numbers dominate the visual landscape, appearing on scraps of paper, digital displays and floating ethereally in the background. These are not mere figures, but powerful symbols carrying deep personal and cultural meanings. A player might be seen contemplating everyday objects or recalling a dream, illustrating how đề participants creatively derive their bets from daily life and nocturnal visions.</p><p>The image reflects Le Hoang Anh Thu's research on how đề permeates players' routines in Ho Chi Minh City. It depicts the intersection of tradition and modernity, with the game thriving amidst a rapidly changing urban environment. The dreamlike quality of floating numbers and faint lottery ticket patterns echoes the players' belief in supernatural messages.</p><p>This visual narrative encapsulates how đề transcends gambling to become a way for players to interpret their world. It invites readers to consider the broader anthropological significance of numerical symbolism across cultures, highlighting how numbers shape life narratives and cultural performances.</p><p>The cover image thus offers a glimpse into a practice that connects everyday Vietnamese experiences with deeper cultural meanings, illustrating the universal yet culturally specific ways numerical reasoning permeates human life.</p><p>MACROBIOTICS IN VIETNAM</p><p>This image captures the essence of Le Hoang Ngoc Yen's study on macrobiotics in Vietnam, showing the striking differences between city life and traditional macrobiotic practices.</p><p>The left side depicts a bustling cityscape, symbolizing the challenges of contemporary living. High-rise buildings, heavy traffic and visible pollution represent the environmental degradation that accompanies rapid industrialization and urbanization. This side embodies the health hazards of modern life, including exposure to pollutants and processed foods, which many Vietnamese associate with the rise in chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular ailments.</p><p>In contrast, the right side portrays a serene rural setting that embodies macrobiotic principles. Lush greenery, simple homes and clear water symbolize harmony with nature. Community members engage in health-promoting activities such as gardening and cooking with fresh, organic ingredients. This side represents the perceived benefits of returning to natural, unprocessed foods and a lifestyle aligned with ancestral wisdom and environmental sustainability.</p><p>Yen's research, based on extensive interviews and field visits, reveals growing concern among Vietnamese about the impact of modernization on health and the environment. Many attribute the increase in chronic diseases to chemical-laden, processed foods and polluted environments.</p><p>The macrobiotic diet, known in Vietnamese as gạo lứt muối mè (‘brown rice and sesame salt’), emphasizes organic whole grains, vegetables and minimally processed foods. Followers view it as more than just a diet – it represents a return to a simpler, more natural way of life in harmony with nature.</p><p>This perspective illuminates how traditional knowledge addresses modern challenges. The macrobiotic movement offers anthropologists insights into cultural constructions of health, resistance to globalized food systems, and identity negotiation in changing societies. 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In a bustling urban setting, people gather to watch lottery draws, discuss numbers and place bets.</p><p>Numbers dominate the visual landscape, appearing on scraps of paper, digital displays and floating ethereally in the background. These are not mere figures, but powerful symbols carrying deep personal and cultural meanings. A player might be seen contemplating everyday objects or recalling a dream, illustrating how đề participants creatively derive their bets from daily life and nocturnal visions.</p><p>The image reflects Le Hoang Anh Thu's research on how đề permeates players' routines in Ho Chi Minh City. It depicts the intersection of tradition and modernity, with the game thriving amidst a rapidly changing urban environment. The dreamlike quality of floating numbers and faint lottery ticket patterns echoes the players' belief in supernatural messages.</p><p>This visual narrative encapsulates how đề transcends gambling to become a way for players to interpret their world. It invites readers to consider the broader anthropological significance of numerical symbolism across cultures, highlighting how numbers shape life narratives and cultural performances.</p><p>The cover image thus offers a glimpse into a practice that connects everyday Vietnamese experiences with deeper cultural meanings, illustrating the universal yet culturally specific ways numerical reasoning permeates human life.</p><p>MACROBIOTICS IN VIETNAM</p><p>This image captures the essence of Le Hoang Ngoc Yen's study on macrobiotics in Vietnam, showing the striking differences between city life and traditional macrobiotic practices.</p><p>The left side depicts a bustling cityscape, symbolizing the challenges of contemporary living. High-rise buildings, heavy traffic and visible pollution represent the environmental degradation that accompanies rapid industrialization and urbanization. This side embodies the health hazards of modern life, including exposure to pollutants and processed foods, which many Vietnamese associate with the rise in chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular ailments.</p><p>In contrast, the right side portrays a serene rural setting that embodies macrobiotic principles. Lush greenery, simple homes and clear water symbolize harmony with nature. Community members engage in health-promoting activities such as gardening and cooking with fresh, organic ingredients. This side represents the perceived benefits of returning to natural, unprocessed foods and a lifestyle aligned with ancestral wisdom and environmental sustainability.</p><p>Yen's research, based on extensive interviews and field visits, reveals growing concern among Vietnamese about the impact of modernization on health and the environment. Many attribute the increase in chronic diseases to chemical-laden, processed foods and polluted environments.</p><p>The macrobiotic diet, known in Vietnamese as gạo lứt muối mè (‘brown rice and sesame salt’), emphasizes organic whole grains, vegetables and minimally processed foods. Followers view it as more than just a diet – it represents a return to a simpler, more natural way of life in harmony with nature.</p><p>This perspective illuminates how traditional knowledge addresses modern challenges. The macrobiotic movement offers anthropologists insights into cultural constructions of health, resistance to globalized food systems, and identity negotiation in changing societies. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
封面和封底标题,第40卷第4期越南地下彩票封面图片捕捉到了越南地下彩票游戏 "đề "的精髓。画面的中心人物是 "跑腿 "和 "庄家",他们是这一非法而顽固的游戏的重要中介。在熙熙攘攘的城市环境中,人们聚集在一起观看彩票开奖、讨论数字并下注。数字主宰着视觉景观,出现在纸屑、数字显示屏上,并在背景中虚无缥缈地漂浮着。这些数字并不仅仅是数字,而是蕴含着深刻的个人和文化含义的强大符号。画面反映了 Le Hoang Anh Thu 对 đề 如何渗透到胡志明市玩家日常生活的研究。它描绘了传统与现代的交汇,游戏在快速变化的城市环境中蓬勃发展。浮动的数字和模糊的彩票图案如梦如幻,呼应了彩民对超自然信息的信仰。这种视觉叙事概括了 đề 如何超越赌博,成为彩民解释其世界的一种方式。这幅封面图片让人一窥越南人将日常经验与深层文化意义联系起来的做法,说明数字推理渗透人类生活的普遍而又具有文化特殊性的方式。越南的大生理学》这幅图像抓住了黎黄玉燕对越南大生理学研究的精髓,展示了城市生活与传统大生理学实践之间的显著差异。高楼大厦、繁忙的交通和明显的污染代表了伴随快速工业化和城市化而来的环境恶化。这一面体现了现代生活对健康的危害,包括接触污染物和加工食品,许多越南人将其与癌症、糖尿病和心血管疾病等慢性疾病的增加联系在一起。郁郁葱葱的树木、简朴的房屋和清澈的河水象征着人与自然的和谐。社区成员从事园艺和使用新鲜有机食材烹饪等促进健康的活动。Yen 的研究基于广泛的访谈和实地考察,结果显示越南人越来越关注现代化对健康和环境的影响。许多人将慢性病的增加归咎于含有大量化学物质的加工食品和污染的环境。大健康饮食在越南语中被称为 gạo lứt muối mè("糙米和芝麻盐"),强调有机全谷物、蔬菜和尽量少的加工食品。追随者们认为它不仅仅是一种饮食--它代表着回归更简单、更自然的生活方式,与大自然和谐相处。大健康运动让人类学家深入了解健康的文化构建、对全球化食品体系的抵制以及不断变化的社会中的身份协商。它为有关传统与现代塑造健康范式和环境关系的辩论做出了贡献。
Front and Back Covers, Volume 40, Number 4. August 2024
Front and back cover caption, volume 40 issue 4
VIETNAMESE UNDERGROUND LOTTERY
The front cover image captures the essence of Vietnam's underground lottery game, đề. Central to the scene are runners and bookies, the critical intermediaries in this illegal yet persistent practice. In a bustling urban setting, people gather to watch lottery draws, discuss numbers and place bets.
Numbers dominate the visual landscape, appearing on scraps of paper, digital displays and floating ethereally in the background. These are not mere figures, but powerful symbols carrying deep personal and cultural meanings. A player might be seen contemplating everyday objects or recalling a dream, illustrating how đề participants creatively derive their bets from daily life and nocturnal visions.
The image reflects Le Hoang Anh Thu's research on how đề permeates players' routines in Ho Chi Minh City. It depicts the intersection of tradition and modernity, with the game thriving amidst a rapidly changing urban environment. The dreamlike quality of floating numbers and faint lottery ticket patterns echoes the players' belief in supernatural messages.
This visual narrative encapsulates how đề transcends gambling to become a way for players to interpret their world. It invites readers to consider the broader anthropological significance of numerical symbolism across cultures, highlighting how numbers shape life narratives and cultural performances.
The cover image thus offers a glimpse into a practice that connects everyday Vietnamese experiences with deeper cultural meanings, illustrating the universal yet culturally specific ways numerical reasoning permeates human life.
MACROBIOTICS IN VIETNAM
This image captures the essence of Le Hoang Ngoc Yen's study on macrobiotics in Vietnam, showing the striking differences between city life and traditional macrobiotic practices.
The left side depicts a bustling cityscape, symbolizing the challenges of contemporary living. High-rise buildings, heavy traffic and visible pollution represent the environmental degradation that accompanies rapid industrialization and urbanization. This side embodies the health hazards of modern life, including exposure to pollutants and processed foods, which many Vietnamese associate with the rise in chronic diseases like cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular ailments.
In contrast, the right side portrays a serene rural setting that embodies macrobiotic principles. Lush greenery, simple homes and clear water symbolize harmony with nature. Community members engage in health-promoting activities such as gardening and cooking with fresh, organic ingredients. This side represents the perceived benefits of returning to natural, unprocessed foods and a lifestyle aligned with ancestral wisdom and environmental sustainability.
Yen's research, based on extensive interviews and field visits, reveals growing concern among Vietnamese about the impact of modernization on health and the environment. Many attribute the increase in chronic diseases to chemical-laden, processed foods and polluted environments.
The macrobiotic diet, known in Vietnamese as gạo lứt muối mè (‘brown rice and sesame salt’), emphasizes organic whole grains, vegetables and minimally processed foods. Followers view it as more than just a diet – it represents a return to a simpler, more natural way of life in harmony with nature.
This perspective illuminates how traditional knowledge addresses modern challenges. The macrobiotic movement offers anthropologists insights into cultural constructions of health, resistance to globalized food systems, and identity negotiation in changing societies. It contributes to debates on tradition and modernity shaping health paradigms and environmental relationships.
期刊介绍:
Anthropology Today is a bimonthly publication which aims to provide a forum for the application of anthropological analysis to public and topical issues, while reflecting the breadth of interests within the discipline of anthropology. It is also committed to promoting debate at the interface between anthropology and areas of applied knowledge such as education, medicine, development etc. as well as that between anthropology and other academic disciplines. Anthropology Today encourages submissions on a wide range of topics, consistent with these aims. Anthropology Today is an international journal both in the scope of issues it covers and in the sources it draws from.