鸟类的奇迹:它们告诉我们关于我们自己、世界和更美好的未来。作者:吉姆·罗宾斯。2017年,Spiegel和Grau,企鹅兰登书屋,纽约。352页。

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
N. Sault
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引用次数: 1

摘要

世界(第81–83页)。皇家公鸡已经成为一种商品,并在人类手中受苦。工厂化养殖鸡肉的实际成本是隐藏的,因为消费者不知道鸡、工人、生活在贫困线以下的佃农受到的不人道待遇,以及污染土地和水、导致海上死区的粪便(第84-85页)。这本书的一个核心问题是作者没有实现他设定的目标,并且与他既定的目标相矛盾。序言认为,“现在是时候更具包容性和创造性了,是时候从表面下窥视,极大地拓宽我们的视野,是时候考虑看待和生活在世界上的其他方式,是时候重塑我们对自然的看法了,这将最终使我们成为一个更有韧性的物种”(第xvii页)。他呼吁采用民族鸟类学的方法,通过原住民的教导加深我们与鸟类的关系。然而,在声称鸟类为我们提供了对世界和我们面临的问题的替代视角后,他阐述了鸟类提供的物质利益。尽管鸟类解剖和行为的细节很有趣,但他通过描述鸟类的这些知识如何用于医学和工程,例如理解大脑功能和设计更好的飞机、火车或绘画,证明了对鸟类的欣赏是合理的(第26页)。他似乎相信人们会欣赏鸟类,因为它们对搜救任务(第239页)、预防或治疗疾病(第217页)和减少害虫(第222页)都很有用。作者也忽略了宠物贸易这本书探讨了鸟类的神秘和美丽。其中有充满悬念的章节——探索鸟类的谜团,如鸟群在喃喃自语中同步移动,山雀用带有句法的叫声传递复杂信息,以及北极燕鸥迁徙12000英里。其他章节提供了关于通过皮肤附着物传递信息的羽毛的空气动力学、具有紫外线感知和磁感知的鸟类视力,以及使鸟类能够在寒冷的温度下忍受巨大高度和深度的极端生理学的迷人细节。作者对鸟类的热爱贯穿全书,他的写作风格引人入胜。每一章都以D.D.道登的优雅插图和狄金森、梭罗、约翰·列侬和穆罕默德·穆拉特·伊尔丹的名言开始。不幸的是,这些鸟的学名没有包括在内。作者描述了鸟类通过食物、羽毛、种子和花粉的传播、减少害虫以及向人们提供建议或警告来提供什么。鸟类通过“平衡世界”来“维持生态系统功能和复原力”(第109页;第114页)。罗宾斯希望人们理解和欣赏鸟类,因为人们保护自己喜欢的东西。他谈到了人们与鸟类之间的情感联系类型及其治愈的力量。通过《飞越美国》,华盛顿特区面临风险的青少年和被监禁的青少年被介绍给猎鹰,并被教导如何保护这些壮丽的鸟类。然而,罗宾斯哀叹道,我们已经失去了一种神圣的感觉——宇宙之蛋是《鸟类的奇迹:它们告诉我们关于我们自己、世界和更美好的未来》的起源。作者:吉姆·罗宾斯。2017年,Spiegel和Grau,企鹅兰登书屋,纽约。352页。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Wonder of Birds: What They Tell Us About Ourselves, the World, and a Better Future. By Jim Robbins. 2017. Spiegel and Grau, Penguin Random House, New York. 352 pp.
world (pp. 81–83). The royal rooster has become a commodity and suffers at human hands. The actual costs of factory farmed chicken are hidden by keeping consumers unaware of the inhumane treatment of the chickens, the workers, the farmers who work as sharecroppers living below the poverty line, and the manure that pollutes land and water, leading to dead zones at sea (pp. 84–85). A central problem of the book is that the author does not follow through on the goals he sets and contradicts his stated aim. The preface argues that “It’s time to be more inclusive and more creative, to peer beneath the surface to vastly broaden our scope, to consider other ways of seeing and being in the world, and to reframe our perspective of nature, which will ultimately make us a far more resilient species” (p. xviii). He calls for an ethno-ornithological approach that can deepen our relationship to birds through Indigenous teachings. However, after claiming that birds offer us alternative perspectives on the world and the issues we face, he then expounds on the material benefits birds offer. Although the details of bird anatomy and behavior are intriguing, he justifies appreciation for birds by describing how this knowledge of birds can be used for medicine and engineering, such as understanding brain function and designing better planes and trains or paint (p. 26). He seems to believe people will appreciate birds because they are useful— for search and rescue missions (p. 239), for preventing or treating disease (p. 217), and reducing pests (p. 222). The author also ignores the pet trade This book explores the mystery and beauty of birds. There are chapters full of suspense— exploring avian enigmas such as flocks synchronizing their movements in murmurations, chickadees transferring complex information using calls with syntax, and migrations of Arctic terns traveling 12,000 miles. Other chapters provide fascinating detail on the aerodynamics of feathers that transmit information through skin attachments, avian eyesight with ultraviolet perception and magnetoreception, and extreme physiology that enables birds to endure great heights and depths with freezing temperatures. The author’s love for birds shines throughout the book and he writes in an engaging style. Each chapter begins with an elegant illustration by D.D. Dowden and quotes from Dickinson, Thoreau, John Lennon, and Mehmet Murat Ildan. Unfortunately, the scientific names of the birds are not included. The author describes what birds provide through food, feathers, dispersal of seeds and pollen, reducing insect pests, and guidance to people with advice or warnings. Birds “maintain ecosystem function and resilience” by “balancing the world” (pp. 109; 114). Robbins wants people to understand and appreciate birds because people conserve what they love. He addresses the types of emotional connection people have with birds and their power to heal. Through “Wings Over America,” at-risk teens and imprisoned youth in Washington, D.C. are introduced to falcons and taught how to protect these magnificent birds. Yet, Robbins laments that we have lost a sense of the sacred—of the cosmic egg as the origin of the The Wonder of Birds: What They Tell Us About Ourselves, the World, and a Be er Future. By Jim Robbins. 2017. Spiegel and Grau, Penguin Random House, New York. 352 pp.
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
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