走向塑料人类学

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Saskia Abrahms-Kavunenko
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引用次数: 4

摘要

塑料在材料上是矛盾的。尽管它们创造看似不受约束的模仿、表现和替代的品质经常受到称赞,但它们具有泄漏、释放和分解的物质性。他们善于模仿,但往往无法重塑。它们表面上抵抗微生物污染,但吸收环境污染物并浸出干扰内分泌的塑化剂。这篇文章认为,由于塑料的物质影响,它们的无处不在,以及它们所带来的社会变革,人类学家需要持续关注这种材料。此外,它认为人类学的方法和理论对于理解塑料在他们(和我们)历史上的关键时刻至关重要。它阐明了人类学可以在其生命周期的各个阶段参与塑料的三种方式。首先,研究塑料挑战了存在的意义:人类是有限的还是可渗透的实体,是个体的、集体的还是介于两者之间的。其次,塑料扰乱了人们对他们消费的产品的生产和处理的了解,愿意知道的,或者被说服值得知道的。第三,塑料的物质性暴露了当代的不平等。塑料可以造成看不见的暴力,无论是在地理上不平等的毒性分布,还是在其巨大的时间影响上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Toward an anthropology of plastics
Materially plastics are ambivalent. In spite of their often lauded quality of creating seemingly untethered imitations, representations and replacements, they have a materiality that leaks, off-gasses and disintegrates. They are accomplished at mimicry yet frequently unable to be remoulded. They are ostensibly resistant to microbial contamination yet absorb environmental pollutants and leach endocrine disrupting plasticisers. This article argues that, due to the material influence of plastics, their ubiquity, and the societal transformations that they have enabled, that anthropologists need to pay sustained attention to this material. Moreover, it argues that anthropological methods and theories are crucial to understanding plastics at a vital moment in their (and our) history. It articulates three ways in which anthropology can engage plastics at all stages in their lifecycles. Firstly, to study plastics challenges what it means to exist: whether or not human beings are bounded or permeable entities, experienced as individuated, collective or somewhere in between. Secondly, plastics disrupt what people know, are willing to know, or are persuaded is worth knowing about the production and disposal of the products that they consume. Thirdly, the materiality of plastics expose contemporary inequalities. Plastics can create unseen violence, both in their geographically unequal toxic distributions and in the vastness of their temporal effects.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Material Culture is an interdisciplinary journal designed to cater for the increasing interest in material culture studies. It is concerned with the relationship between artefacts and social relations irrespective of time and place and aims to systematically explore the linkage between the construction of social identities and the production and use of culture. The Journal of Material Culture transcends traditional disciplinary and cultural boundaries drawing on a wide range of disciplines including anthropology, archaeology, design studies, history, human geography, museology and ethnography.
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