{"title":"死亡的核算:一个历史的视角","authors":"","doi":"10.1177/10323732231200148","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Where death and accounting coalesce in the historical literature, it is generally within the context of institutions. Most prevalent are military, medical or welfare organisations, or instances where labour is institutionalised, such as slavery practices (see for example Baker, 2019; Funnell and Chwastiak, 2015). These studies demonstrate how calculative practices are mobilised to transform death to enable a transaction through enumeration or valuation, such as the inventory-style accounting for enslaved people, the commodification of the corpse to provide specimens for anatomical schools in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and financial reporting of work, health and safety or death (see for example Tyson and Oldroyd, 2019; Moerman and van der Laan, 2021a). This research into accounting for death tends to identify death as a transactional phenomenon used in calculative practices; or a consequence of organisational or institutional activity that gives rise to demands for accountability (see for example Fleishman et al., 2004; Sargiacomo et al., 2012). In situations where death is the consequence of intended or unintended organisational or institutional activity, the responsibility is to render an account of death. In order to reorient the analytical focus to death as a phenomenon in accounting studies, the term necroaccountability has been introduced into the lexicon (Moerman and van der Laan, 2022). Necro comes from the Greek nekros meaning corpse and gives rise to a novel accountability relationship. For example, is there a duty owed to the former self or the future corpse? Given the limitations of calculative practices to disclose accounts of death, accounting historians generally have access to rich sources of alternative forms of data and the expertise to establish a narrative of necroaccountability. In addition, since multimodal accounts of death also describe the conditions of the living, they also inform us about relationships of power and inequalities. For example, instances of genocide and war, slavery practices, and the market for corpses (Lippman and Wilson, 2007; Moerman and van der Laan, 2021b). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
死亡和会计在历史文献中结合在一起的地方,通常是在制度的背景下。最普遍的是军事、医疗或福利组织,或劳动制度化的情况,如奴隶制做法(例如,见Baker,2019;Funnell和Chwastiak,2015年)。这些研究表明,如何动员计算实践来改变死亡,从而通过列举或估价实现交易,例如对被奴役者的库存式核算,十八世纪和十九世纪为解剖学校提供标本的尸体商品化,以及工作的财务报告,健康和安全或死亡(例如参见Tyson和Oldroyd,2019;Moerman和van der Laan,2021a)。这项关于死亡核算的研究倾向于将死亡视为一种用于计算实践的交易现象;或组织或机构活动的结果,从而产生问责要求(例如,见Fleishman等人,2004年;Sargiacomo等人,2012年)。在死亡是有意或无意的组织或机构活动造成的情况下,责任是对死亡进行说明。为了将分析重点重新定位为死亡这一会计研究中的一种现象,死亡责任一词已被引入词典(Moerman和van der Laan,2022)。Necro来自希腊语nekros,意思是尸体,并产生了一种新颖的责任关系。例如,是对从前的自己还是对未来的尸体负有责任?考虑到披露死亡账目的计算方法的局限性,会计历史学家通常可以获得丰富的替代形式的数据来源和建立死亡责任叙述的专业知识。此外,由于死亡的多模式描述也描述了生活条件,它们也告诉我们权力和不平等的关系。例如,种族灭绝和战争、奴隶制做法和尸体市场(Lippman和Wilson,2007;Moerman和van der Laan,2021b)。本特刊寻求历史贡献,包括但不限于以下主题:
Where death and accounting coalesce in the historical literature, it is generally within the context of institutions. Most prevalent are military, medical or welfare organisations, or instances where labour is institutionalised, such as slavery practices (see for example Baker, 2019; Funnell and Chwastiak, 2015). These studies demonstrate how calculative practices are mobilised to transform death to enable a transaction through enumeration or valuation, such as the inventory-style accounting for enslaved people, the commodification of the corpse to provide specimens for anatomical schools in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and financial reporting of work, health and safety or death (see for example Tyson and Oldroyd, 2019; Moerman and van der Laan, 2021a). This research into accounting for death tends to identify death as a transactional phenomenon used in calculative practices; or a consequence of organisational or institutional activity that gives rise to demands for accountability (see for example Fleishman et al., 2004; Sargiacomo et al., 2012). In situations where death is the consequence of intended or unintended organisational or institutional activity, the responsibility is to render an account of death. In order to reorient the analytical focus to death as a phenomenon in accounting studies, the term necroaccountability has been introduced into the lexicon (Moerman and van der Laan, 2022). Necro comes from the Greek nekros meaning corpse and gives rise to a novel accountability relationship. For example, is there a duty owed to the former self or the future corpse? Given the limitations of calculative practices to disclose accounts of death, accounting historians generally have access to rich sources of alternative forms of data and the expertise to establish a narrative of necroaccountability. In addition, since multimodal accounts of death also describe the conditions of the living, they also inform us about relationships of power and inequalities. For example, instances of genocide and war, slavery practices, and the market for corpses (Lippman and Wilson, 2007; Moerman and van der Laan, 2021b). This special issue seeks historical contributions that include, but are not limited to the following topics:
期刊介绍:
Accounting History is an international peer reviewed journal that aims to publish high quality historical papers. These could be concerned with exploring the advent and development of accounting bodies, conventions, ideas, practices and rules. They should attempt to identify the individuals and also the local, time-specific environmental factors which affected accounting, and should endeavour to assess accounting"s impact on organisational and social functioning.