Power and Othering

Q1 Arts and Humanities Current Swedish Archaeology Pub Date : 2021-12-09 DOI:10.37718/csa.2021.06
Nerissa Russell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

I thank Christina Fredengren for this productive discussion of how to theo­ rize relations between humans and other animals, which raises a number of important issues. In recent years we have seen the advent of various ap­ proaches – multispecies ethnography/archaeology, posthumanism, entan­ glement, actor­network theory, flat ontologies, symmetrical archaeology, and others – that seek to decenter humans in their interactions with other entities. As Fredengren points out, this is easier said than done, and often when we attempt to put humans and other animals on the same plane, hu­ mans remain implicitly centered. We still mostly consider other species only in relation to their interactions with humans, and it concerns me that the more implicit the centering of humans, the less we acknowledge the power relations that Fredengren insists we must confront. I am heartened to see considerations of power being brought to bear on these ‘flat’ approaches (e.g. Fowles 2016; Grossman & Paulette 2020; Van Dyke 2021). The rela­ tions among entities that we study must include power relations; acknowl­ edging animal agency does not mean that they are equal partners in most situations. Leaving power out of the analysis always benefits the powerful. Fredengren’s critique of categorical thinking is well taken, although this, too, is difficult to abandon completely (how can we think without categories?), as seen in the keynote itself, where taxonomic categories such as sheep or Pitted Ware Culture are deployed. In the end we need to rec­ ognize that categories always impose somewhat arbitrary boundaries but give us a place to start – and make phenomena that challenge or cross those boundaries particularly striking. There has always been a particular am­ biguity in the conjunction of the terms ‘human’ and ‘animal’. Humans, of
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权力与其他
我感谢Christina Fredengren就如何理论化人类和其他动物之间的关系进行了富有成效的讨论,这引发了许多重要问题。近年来,我们看到了各种方法的出现——多物种人种学/考古学、后人文主义、进化论、行动者网络理论、平面本体论、对称考古学等——这些方法试图在人类与其他实体的互动中分散人类的注意力。正如弗雷登格伦所指出的,这说起来容易做起来难,而且当我们试图把人类和其他动物放在同一个平面上时,人类往往保持着隐含的中心地位。我们仍然主要只根据其他物种与人类的互动来考虑它们,我担心的是,人类的中心越隐含,我们就越不承认弗雷登格伦坚持我们必须面对的权力关系。我很高兴看到权力的考虑被带到这些“扁平”的方法中(例如Fowles 2016;Grossman和Paulette 2020;Van Dyke 2021)。我们研究的实体之间的关系必须包括权力关系;动物代理机构的认可并不意味着他们在大多数情况下都是平等的合作伙伴。把权力排除在分析之外总是有利于权贵。弗雷登格伦对分类思维的批评被很好地接受了,尽管这也很难完全放弃(我们怎么能在没有分类的情况下思考。最后,我们需要认识到,类别总是强加一些武断的界限,但给了我们一个起点——并使挑战或跨越这些界限的现象特别引人注目。“人类”和“动物”这两个术语的结合总是有一个特别的意义。人类,共
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来源期刊
Current Swedish Archaeology
Current Swedish Archaeology Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
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0
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