被忽视的档案馆:博物馆收藏的当地锻造的锄头是20世纪前妇女对丰戈洛姆齐姆胡鲁地区农业经济贡献的证据

Steven Kotze
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摘要

摘要2018年在夸祖鲁-纳塔尔八家博物馆进行的一项调查确定,祖鲁称为amageja的野地锄在这些档案中只占当地锻造冶金物品的不到五分之一,而其余都是武器。至关重要的是,在被评估的博物馆中,只有两个与铁器时代历史或祖鲁王国有关的展览提供了有关锄头的背景信息。在这篇文章中,我认为该地区19世纪非洲社区基于性别的劳动分工影响了人们对他们使用的工具的态度。由于一组组物品通常与其他类别相关,因此布迪厄建议,只有在调查了任何特定物品类型的“封圣和分级程序的历史”后,才能确定文物的价值。在调查amageja在博物馆中的位置时,这项研究考虑到了这些物品在很大程度上被忽视的文化和经济意义,包括非洲来源的口头证词和祖鲁语习语中保存的对农业态度的证据。文章认为,博物馆收藏的锄头构成了一个被忽视的“锄头种植”档案,即在Phongolo Mzimkhulu地理区域内,基于手工工具的自给作物生产,该地理区域大致接近夸祖鲁-纳塔尔的现代领土。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neglected Archive: Museum Collections of Locally Forged Hoes as Evidence of Contributions by Women to the Agricultural Economy of the Phongolo-Mzimkhulu Region Prior to the Twentieth Century
Abstract A 2018 survey conducted in eight KwaZulu-Natal museums determined that field-hoes, called amageja in Zulu, constitute less than one-fifth of locally forged metallurgical items in those archives, while the rest are weapons. Crucially, only two displays related to either Iron Age history or the Zulu Kingdom in the museums that were evaluated provide contextual information on field-hoes. In this article I contend that gender-based divisions of labour in nineteenth-century African communities of this region have affected attitudes towards the tools they used. As groups of objects are generally assembled within collections in relation to other categories, Bourdieu suggested that the value of an artefact can only be established after investigation of the ‘history of the procedure of canonisation and hierarchisation’ of any particular object type. Investigating the place of amageja in museums, this research considers the largely overlooked cultural and economic significance of such items, including evidence of attitudes towards agriculture preserved in oral testimony from African sources and Zulu-language idioms. The article argues that museum collections of hoes form a neglected archive of ‘hoe cultivation’, or subsistence crop production based on the use of manual implements, within the Phongolo-Mzimkhulu geographic region that roughly approximates to the modern territory of KwaZulu-Natal.
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