如何制作印加木乃伊:安第斯防腐,秘鲁科学,和帝国的收藏

IF 1 2区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Isis Pub Date : 2018-03-01 DOI:10.1086/697020
C. Heaney
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引用次数: 6

摘要

作为科学对象,木乃伊诞生于欧洲与两种“古老的”身体知识的相遇。第一种是众所周知的:经过防腐处理的埃及死者被碾碎成一种名为mumia的药材,后来被收集为“木乃伊”。然而,木乃伊之所以能够在全球范围内传播,要归功于16世纪西班牙人与保存完好的印加人尸体yllapa的相遇。这篇文章认为,没收和展示这些尸体亵渎了它们的神圣影响,但它们被重新归类为“防腐”尸体,使得秘鲁土著作家可以为印加人失去的医学复杂性辩护。随后,欧洲学者利用这种复杂性,将“木乃伊”作为一种比较类别。原始的伊拉帕腐烂了,模糊了印加的主权和对其进行解剖的拉丁美洲殖民科学,但它们在其他“古秘鲁人”保存的尸体中想象的复活,使“印加木乃伊”成为一件极具收藏价值的科学物品,体现了一个古老学问和反帝国主义的新国家历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How to Make an Inca Mummy: Andean Embalming, Peruvian Science, and the Collection of Empire
As scientific objects, mummies were born of Europe’s encounter with two “ancient” bodily knowledges. The first is well known: the embalmed Egyptian dead who were ground into a materia medica named mumia and later were collected as “mummies” themselves. Yet mummies owe their global possibility—of ancient sciences of embalming and environmental manipulation apprehensible worldwide—to the sixteenth-century Spanish encounter with the Incas’ preserved dead, the yllapa. This article argues that their confiscation and display desecrated their sacred affect, but their recategorization as “embalmed” bodies allowed Indigenous Peruvian writers to argue for the Incas’ lost medical sophistication. European scholars then used that sophistication to establish “mummies” as a comparative category. The original yllapas decayed, blurring both Inca sovereignty and the colonial Latin American sciences that anatomized it, but their imagined resurrection in the preserved bodies of other “ancient Peruvians” turned the “Inca mummy” into a highly collectible scientific object, embodying a newly national past of ancient learning and anti-imperial indictment.
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来源期刊
Isis
Isis 管理科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
16.70%
发文量
150
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Since its inception in 1912, Isis has featured scholarly articles, research notes, and commentary on the history of science, medicine, and technology and their cultural influences. Review essays and book reviews on new contributions to the discipline are also included. An official publication of the History of Science Society, Isis is the oldest English-language journal in the field. The Press, along with the journal’s editorial office in Starkville, MS, would like to acknowledge the following supporters: Mississippi State University, its College of Arts and Sciences and History Department, and the Consortium for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine.
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