生物决定论想象中奇怪的来世

IF 1.4 1区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY
Whitney Battle-Baptiste
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Blakey在欧洲背景下对Reich的批判——我之所以愿意这样做,是因为这是我更熟悉的领域——应该很明显,就像种族是一种意识形态建构一样,欧洲考古学和考古学研究中使用的其他人类分类也是如此。这里最关键的例子是社会身份的本质化,比如性别刻板印象和模仿现代民族国家的种族。人们一再声称暴力、战争和社会不平等是人类社会不可避免的特征,并将其投射到遥远的史前时代,其经验基础也不稳固。当与新发现的古代DNA数据相关的叙事再现了现代西方关于种族身份、性别关系以及战争和暴力在群体间关系中的作用的比喻时,我们不能真的放弃这样的辩护,即这是我们对数据的中立解读客观得出的结果。所有相关的类别,人口、文化、迁徙和人口更替,实际上只是复制了我们插入并投射到史前的类别。这不仅是智力上的懒惰,而且阻止我们真正获得关于过去的新知识。更不幸的是,静态文化的概念公然歪曲了考古记录(Hofmann 2015;Vander Linden 2016;Furholt 2018;2019b)和非国家社会组织的人类学知识(例如Cameron 2013),这是公认的智慧。我们真的不得不不情愿地承认“我们可能不喜欢”的史前史吗?因为它充满了来自东方的暴力厌女群体,形成了生物学定义的年轻男性群体,他们在欧洲横行霸道,杀死和强奸自己进入我们的基因库(也许有点不公平地挑战了Kristiansen等人2017年的这篇备受争议的文章,但在Barras 2019的热门改编作品中明确表达了这一点)?我们难道没有责任反驳这种叙事吗?这种叙事再现了右翼将人类历史视为文化永恒冲突的观点?尤其是当我们真的知道是我们一开始就把这些想法插入到我们的模型中时?因此,如果我们想避免给邪恶的政治力量提供意识形态弹药,显然有必要重新思考我们的类别,但更根本的是,这是对过去产生任何新想法的先决条件。对于新的考古学项目来说,创建考虑到除了我们现代世界已知的群体组织形式之外的其他形式的群体组织的模型,难道不是一个令人兴奋的挑战吗?在国家边界限制和规范人们的流动和生物混合物之前,探索人口历史的时间和空间动态难道不是一种创新吗?Blakey对生物决定论和科学客观性概念的批判不仅是对自我反思的邀请,而且我们应该把它作为一个机会,思考如何创建一个真正跨学科的考古学研究议程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The strange afterlife of biodeterministic imagination
Blakey’s critique of Reich into a European context – which I would like to do because that is the field with which I am more familiar – it should be obvious that in the same way as race is an ideological construct, so too are other categorizations of humans used in European archaeology and in archaeogenetic studies. Here the most critical examples are the essentialization of social identities, like gender stereotypes and ethnicities modelled after modern nation states. The same could be argued for the recurring claims of violence, war and social inequality as inevitable characteristics of human societies, projecting them back into deep prehistory, on shaky empirical foundations. When the narratives connected to the newly found ancient-DNA data reproduce modern Western tropes about ethnic identities, gender relations and the role of war and violence in intergroup relations, we cannot really fall back on the defence that it is something that objectively follows from our neutral reading of the data. All the relevant categories, the populations, cultures, migrations and population replacements, really just reproduce the categories inserted by us and projected back into prehistory. This not only is intellectually lazy, but also prevents us from really gaining new knowledge about the past. This is even more unfortunate, as it is well-established wisdom that the concept of static cultures blatantly misrepresents both the archaeological record (Hofmann 2015; Vander Linden 2016; Furholt 2018; 2019b) and the anthropological knowledge of non-state social organization (e.g. Cameron 2013). Do we really have to, begrudgingly, succumb to acknowledging a prehistory that ‘we may not like’ – because it is filled with violent misogynist hordes from the East, forming biologically defined groups of young males, who bully their way through Europe, killing and raping themselves into our gene pool (perhaps a little unfairly challenging the well-argued piece by Kristiansen et al. 2017, but clearly expressed in its popular adaptation by Barras 2019)? Is it not our responsibility to counter such narratives, which reproduce the right-wing’s view of human history as a perpetual clash of cultures? Especially when we actually know that it was us who inserted these ideas into our models in the first place? So it is clearly necessary to rethink our categories if we want to avoid giving ideological ammunition to nefarious political forces, but more fundamentally it is a prerequisite for arriving at any new ideas about the past. Is it not actually an exciting challenge for the new archaeogenetic project to create models that consider other forms of group organization than the ones known for our own modern world? Would it not be an innovative take to explore the temporal and spatial dynamics of population histories in periods before state borders circumscribed and regulated peoples’ movements and biological admixtures? Blakey’s critique of biodeterminism and the notion of scientific objectivity is not only an invitation to self-reflection, but we should take it as an opportunity to think of ways forward in creating a truly interdisciplinary archaeogenetic research agenda.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.60%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Archaeology is undergoing rapid changes in terms of its conceptual framework and its place in contemporary society. In this challenging intellectual climate, Archaeological Dialogues has become one of the leading journals for debating innovative issues in archaeology. Firmly rooted in European archaeology, it now serves the international academic community for discussing the theories and practices of archaeology today. True to its name, debate takes a central place in Archaeological Dialogues.
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