野兽的面孔:恐怖文学中的兽性描写与心理反应

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Human Ecology Review Pub Date : 2019-12-19 DOI:10.22459/her.25.02.2019.04
Jonathan W. Thurston
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目前有关文化和文学中捕食者神话的研究表明,野生动物和家养动物之间存在着独特的二元关系。学者们经常认为,捕食者独特的可怕之处在于它无意识地入侵我们的文明标准,扰乱秩序,并越过我们恐惧的最后边界:被活活吃掉。其他学者也倾向于用近乎殖民主义的分析来解读这些捕食者的恐怖,围绕着捕食者将人类的文化等级制度凌驾于动物之上的不可告人的动机这一概念。然而,这些学者经常忽视的是生理和进化驱动力,这些驱动力最终构建了对这些捕食者的一般解剖轮廓和特征的基因反应。在我们进行理解人类对其在环境中地位的感知的关键工作时,重要的是要认识到,除了讨论文化构建的主导范式外,我们也是动物,对我们的环境条件有着原始的反应。必须承认,这些本能反应在我们对“野生动物”的看法中发挥了作用。对捕食者与人类互动的研究需要对这种关系进行仔细研究。在恐怖文本中——文学、电影、电子游戏和其他媒体——对恐惧的“野兽”的描述依赖于对捕食者形象的解剖解构,以突出在观众中产生本能反应的关键捕食者特征。在恐怖类型中,展示的是我们对捕食者恐惧的解剖。
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The Face of the Beast: Bestial Descriptions and Psychological Response in Horror Literature
Current scholarship surrounding the predator mythos in culture and literature suggests a distinctive binary of wild–domestic. Scholars often argue that the uniquely terrifying aspect of the predator is in its unconscious capacity to invade our standards of civilization, disrupt order, and pass our final frontier of fear: that of being eaten alive. Other scholars, too, tend to read the terror of these predators with an almost colonial analysis, centering around the concept of the predators’ ulterior motive to flip the cultural hierarchy of human above animals. However, what these scholars often neglect are the physiological and evolutionary drives that ultimately construct a genetic response to these predators’ general anatomical outlines and features. As we undertake the crucial work of understanding humans’ perceptions of their place in their environment, it is important to recognize that, aside from discussions of culturally constructed paradigms of dominance, we too are animals, with primal responses to our environmental conditions. These instinctive responses must be acknowledged as playing a part in our view of the “wild.” The scholarship on predator–human interactions necessitates a close study of such relations. In horror texts—literature, films, video games, and other media—the depiction of fearful “beasts” relies on anatomically deconstructing the image of the predator to highlight key predatory features that generate instinctive responses in the audience. On display, in the horror genre, is the anatomy of our fear of predators.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
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期刊介绍: Human Ecology Review (ISSN 1074-4827) is a refereed journal published twice a year by the Society for Human Ecology. The Journal publishes peer-reviewed research and theory on the interaction between humans and the environment and other links between culture and nature (Research in Human Ecology), essays and applications relevant to human ecology (Human Ecology Forum), book reviews (Contemporary Human Ecology), and relevant commentary, announcements, and awards (Human Ecology Bulletin).
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