从巫术到实验室:流行病和病毒脆弱性的经验。

IF 0.4 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Oceania Pub Date : 2021-03-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-28 DOI:10.1002/ocea.5294
Dinah Norman, Jemima Miller, Mavis Timothy, Graham Friday, Leonard Norman, Gloria Friday, Adrianne Friday, Warren Timothy, Joanne Miller, Lettie Norman, Noeleen Raggett, Colleen Charlie, Rhoda Hammer, Marlene Timothy, Peggy Mawson, Amanda Kearney, John Bradley
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2019冠状病毒病大流行促使卫生专业人员、土著社区领袖和社会科学家重新关注采取符合文化的预防性卫生措施和战略的必要性。这篇文章是从澳大利亚北部海湾地区土著居民的角度来追踪流行病的故事的,作者是来自偏远的博罗洛拉社区的Yanyuwa家庭,以及与Yanyuwa有长期联系的两位人类学家。它特别引导了对COVID-19之后当前“病毒脆弱性”困境的讨论,相对于其他大流行,包括1969年的香港流感和几十年前的1919年西班牙流感。这一讨论突出表明,对于疾病和疾病威胁的文化上的细微差别和规定的反应,在烟雨族中有着悠久的历史。Yanyuwa的文化作品有助于理解过去的大流行和疾病的发作、COVID-19疾病的威胁以及将“病毒脆弱性”归因于这个偏远的土著社区的巨大变化。其目的是在这个故事中集中Yanyuwa的声音,作为增进对土著对流行病的了解以及与文化相关和受控制的卫生应对措施和社区福祉战略的重要一步。
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From Sorcery to Laboratory: Pandemics and Yanyuwa Experiences of Viral Vulnerability.

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted renewed attention among health professionals, Aboriginal community leaders, and social scientists to the need for culturally responsive preventative health measures and strategies. This article, a collaborative effort, involving Yanyuwa families from the remote community of Borroloola and two anthropologists with whom Yanyuwa have long associations, tracks the story of pandemics from the perspective of Aboriginal people in the Gulf region of northern Australia. It specifically orients the discussion of the current predicament of 'viral vulnerability' in the wake of COVID-19, relative to other pandemics, including the Hong Kong flu in 1969 and the Spanish flu decades earlier in 1919. This discussion highlights that culturally nuanced and prescribed responses to illness and threat of illness have a long history for Yanyuwa. Yanyuwa cultural repertoires have assisted in the process of making sense of massive change, in the form of past pandemics and the onset of sickness, the threat of illness with COVID-19 and the attribution of 'viral vulnerability' to this remote Aboriginal community. The aim is to centralise Yanyuwa voices in this story, as an important step in growing understandings of Aboriginal knowledge of pandemics and culturally relevant and controlled health responses and strategies for communal well-being.

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来源期刊
Oceania
Oceania ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: The Australian journal OCEANIA focuses on the study of indigenous peoples of Australia, Melanesia, Polynesia, Micronesia, and Southeast Asia. A recent issue includes articles on land wars, land utilization, and aboriginal self-determination. There are typically five articles per issue and six to ten book reviews. Occasionally, an issue is devoted to a single topic (Katz).
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