Fermentation and the Ethnobiology of Microbial Entanglement

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Ethnobiology Letters Pub Date : 2019-07-18 DOI:10.14237/EBL.10.1.2019.1481
A. Flachs, Joseph D. Orkin
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Fermentation preserves and transforms foods through autochthonous or introduced microorganisms. Fermentation is of special interest to ethnobiologists because it relies on place- and practice-based knowledge, local flora and microbial taxa, is sensitive to cultural and ecological conditions, and illuminates the interactions through which communities shape and are shaped by the world around them. In this short topical review, we discuss recent anthropological and ethnobiological research into fermentation, arguing that this topic deserves further attention during the current moment of microbial interest across social and natural sciences. We present a typology of scholarship on human-microbial relationships that delineates three intellectual camps in this literature: neo-cultural ecology, microbiopolitics, and the environmental humanities. In light of biomedical and scientific attention to microbes—not only as threats but also as complex and beneficial actors in our lives—it is crucial to understand how socioecological practices including growing, preparing, and consuming fermented foods sustain microbial communities, heritage foodways, and human wellbeing. 
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发酵与微生物缠结的民族生物学
发酵通过本地或引入的微生物保存和转化食物。民族生物学家对发酵特别感兴趣,因为它依赖于基于地点和实践的知识、当地植物群和微生物分类群,对文化和生态条件敏感,并阐明了社区形成和被周围世界塑造的相互作用。在这篇简短的专题综述中,我们讨论了最近对发酵的人类学和民族生物学研究,认为在当前社会和自然科学对微生物感兴趣的时刻,这个主题值得进一步关注。我们提出了一种关于人类与微生物关系的学术类型,在这篇文献中描绘了三个知识阵营:新文化生态学、微生物政治学和环境人文学科。鉴于生物医学和科学界对微生物的关注——微生物不仅是我们生活中的威胁,也是复杂而有益的参与者——了解包括种植、准备和食用发酵食品在内的社会生态实践如何维持微生物群落、传统饮食方式和人类福祉至关重要。
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
16 weeks
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