“祖辈树”:对一棵遗产树被杀的恐惧

IF 0.6 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY International Journal of Intangible Heritage Pub Date : 2018-01-01 DOI:10.35638/IJIH.2018..13.002
R. Stoffle, Alden Naranjo, Christopher E. Sittler, Kelly Slivka
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文说明了认识论的障碍会阻碍人们对自然遗产资源的交流和理解。2017年,科罗拉多州德尔塔一棵活生生的尤特“祖树”被杀,这一普遍问题变得更加明显。这棵260岁的树被认为是三个尤特印第安部落和科罗拉多州人民的文化中心,在三角洲县历史协会还活着的时候就被砍倒了。关于这一行动的沟通是短暂的,片面的,并且被两党截然不同的信念所蒙蔽:即,对欧美人来说,这棵树只是没有权利的木头,而对尤特人来说,这棵树是一个活着的祖父,有充分的生存权利。
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‘Grandfather Tree’: Ute Horror at the Killing of a Heritage Tree
This paper illustrates that epistemological barriers can stand in the way of communication about, and understanding of, natural heritage resources. This common problem becomes explicit by using the 2017 killing of a living Ute ‘Grandfather Tree’ in Delta, Colorado. The 260-year-old tree, which was recognised as culturally central to the three Ute Indian Tribes and the people of the State of Colorado, was cut down while still alive by the Delta County Historical Society. Communication about this action was short, one-sided, and clouded by the contrasting beliefs of the two parties: i.e., to Euro-Americans the tree was just wood without rights, while to the Ute people the tree was a living grandfather with full rights to exist.
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来源期刊
International Journal of Intangible Heritage
International Journal of Intangible Heritage HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
16.70%
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0
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