东南亚原住民洪水叙事与雷电情结

IF 1.1 3区 历史学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Adam Brumm, Gregory Forth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

澳洲野狗的祖先大约在4000年前被乘船到达的人们带到澳大利亚大陆。然而,这些来自北方的旅行者的身份,以及他们与澳大利亚土著居民互动的性质,都是未知的。在这里,我们提出,来自金伯利的土著洪水叙述包含了土著居民与早期亚洲海员以“雷群”形式接触的证据。后者是一个非常特殊的禁忌、仪式和故事的剧目,广泛存在于印度尼西亚、菲律宾和马来西亚半岛的民族学上已知的社会中,但以前没有在澳大利亚被发现。在东南亚群体中,这种文化情结围绕着这样一种观念,即某些被禁止的对动物的行为——尤其是“嘲笑”动物,把它们当作人类对待——会引发惩罚性的风暴和/或洪水。我们表明,在金伯利地区的一些口头传统中,动物嘲弄同样被认为是过去创造时代发生的灾难性洪水事件背后的病原体。我们认为,这种局部的土著变体的雷综合体反映了与早期南岛语系的航海家的密切互动,这些航海家显然是通过金伯利海岸将祖先的野狗引入澳大利亚大陆的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Aboriginal flood narratives and the thunder complex in Southeast Asia

Aboriginal flood narratives and the thunder complex in Southeast Asia

The ancestors of the dingo were brought to mainland Australia around 4000 years ago by people who arrived by boat. The identity of these voyagers from the north, however, and the nature of their interactions with the Aboriginal population of Australia, are unknown. Here, we propose that Indigenous flood narratives from the Kimberley contain evidence for contact between Aboriginal people and early Asian seafarers in the form of the “thunder complex”. The latter is a very specific repertoire of taboos, rituals and stories that occurs widely among ethnographically known societies of Indonesia, the Philippines and peninsular Malaysia, but has not previously been identified in Australia. Among Southeast Asian groups, this cultural complex revolves around the idea that certain prohibited acts perpetrated against animals – especially “mocking” them by treating them as though they were human – precipitate a punitive storm and/or flooding. We show that in some oral traditions of the Kimberley region animal mockery is similarly held to be the causative agent behind disastrous flooding events that took place in the past creationary epoch. We contend that this localised Aboriginal variant of the thunder complex reflects an episode of close interaction with early Austronesian-speaking voyagers who introduced ancestral dingoes to mainland Australia, apparently via the Kimberley coast.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Archaeology in Oceania is published online and in print versions three times a year: April, July, October. It accepts articles and research reports in prehistoric and historical archaeology, modern material culture and human biology of ancient and modern human populations. Its primary geographic focus is Australia, the islands of the Pacific Ocean and lands of the western Pacific rim. All articles and research reports accepted as being within the remit of the journal and of appropriate standard will be reviewed by two scholars; authors will be informed of these comments though not necessarily of the reviewer’s names.
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