From tomb-keeper to tomb-occupant: the changing conceptualisation of dogs in early China

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 0 ASIAN STUDIES Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Pub Date : 2023-02-27 DOI:10.1017/S1356186322000529
Kelsey Granger
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Abstract

Abstract Dogs have played a vital and varied role in the social history of early China. Whether used as a source of food, a hunting-aid, or a sacrificial victim, dogs were intimately connected with human life and death. The placement and significance of dismembered and slaughtered dogs in human tombs have been a source of scholarly interest across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. However, less attention has been paid to sources which present us with a spectrum of concerns surrounding the treatment of dogs after their death. Should they be consumed, discarded, or buried? Which dogs were deserving of burial, and how were such burials viewed by human commentators? By analysing textual, archaeological, and material sources, this article explores the changing conceptualisation of dogs in life and in death through the medium of the tomb, showing how the transition from tomb-keeper to tomb-occupant reflects an increasingly anthropomorphic view of canine potential and moral fibre by the early medieval period.
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从守墓人到占墓人:中国早期狗观念的变迁
狗在中国早期社会历史上扮演着重要而多样的角色。无论是作为食物的来源,狩猎的帮手,还是祭祀的牺牲品,狗都与人类的生死密切相关。在20世纪和21世纪,被肢解和屠宰的狗在人类坟墓中的位置和意义一直是学术兴趣的来源。然而,很少注意到向我们提出有关狗死后待遇的一系列关切的消息来源。它们应该被消耗、丢弃还是埋葬?哪些狗应该被埋葬,人类评论员是如何看待这些葬礼的?通过分析文本、考古和材料来源,本文通过坟墓媒介探讨了狗在生与死中的概念变化,展示了从中世纪早期,从守墓人到占墓人的转变如何反映了犬类潜力和道德纤维日益拟人化的观点。
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