{"title":"《母狼杀手案","authors":"C. Tabernero","doi":"10.1525/hsns.2022.52.4.524","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In July 1974, a she-wolf allegedly killed two children in Ourense (Spain). A press outburst followed, with a heated debate about the extermination or conservation of wolf populations. This article examines that media coverage as a highly illustrative example of a multilayered process of natural history knowledge construction. The initial focus on the legal standing of wolves soon turned to an argument about Spain’s modernization, a central contention during Franco’s dictatorship, particularly in the last two decades. In a context of the rise of the natural sciences as a noteworthy field of sociopolitical negotiation worldwide, the scientific definition and management of natural heritage, intertwined with nationalist and internationalist rationales that were integral to the regime’s enduring legitimation strategies, quickly became central issues. In addition, Felix Rodríguez de la Fuente (1928–1980), a highly influential naturalist, media icon, and celebrity champion of wolves, whose stance of a scientifically based activism elicited mixed feelings in late Franco’s Spain, was quickly drawn into the quarrel with shepherds, hunters, scholars, policymakers, and journalists. His involvement, against a backdrop of locally situated and environmentally related conflicts, allows us to analyze the ambivalent role of science, media, and celebrity in the establishment of the epistemological status of local/rural and outsider/urban knowledge in the construction of narratives about nature. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
1974年7月,据称一只母狼在欧伦塞(西班牙)杀死了两名儿童。随后,媒体爆发了一场关于灭绝还是保护狼的激烈辩论。这篇文章考察了媒体报道作为多层次自然历史知识建构过程的一个极具说明性的例子。最初对狼的法律地位的关注很快转向了关于西班牙现代化的争论,这是佛朗哥独裁统治期间的一个核心争论,尤其是在过去的20年里。在自然科学作为世界范围内值得注意的社会政治谈判领域兴起的背景下,自然遗产的科学定义和管理,与民族主义和国际主义的基本原理交织在一起,成为政权持久合法化战略的组成部分,迅速成为核心问题。此外,Felix Rodríguez de la Fuente(1928-1980)是一位极具影响力的博物学家、媒体偶像和狼的名人拥护者,他的科学行动主义立场在佛朗哥晚期的西班牙引起了复杂的感情,很快被卷入牧羊人、猎人、学者、政策制定者和记者的争吵中。他的参与,在当地和环境相关冲突的背景下,使我们能够分析科学,媒体和名人在建立当地/农村和外地人/城市知识的认识论地位方面的矛盾作用。总而言之,这一案例汇集了科学知识生产的官方机制、各种形式的公众和机构参与、广泛的人们日常生活经验以及媒体的关键参与。
In July 1974, a she-wolf allegedly killed two children in Ourense (Spain). A press outburst followed, with a heated debate about the extermination or conservation of wolf populations. This article examines that media coverage as a highly illustrative example of a multilayered process of natural history knowledge construction. The initial focus on the legal standing of wolves soon turned to an argument about Spain’s modernization, a central contention during Franco’s dictatorship, particularly in the last two decades. In a context of the rise of the natural sciences as a noteworthy field of sociopolitical negotiation worldwide, the scientific definition and management of natural heritage, intertwined with nationalist and internationalist rationales that were integral to the regime’s enduring legitimation strategies, quickly became central issues. In addition, Felix Rodríguez de la Fuente (1928–1980), a highly influential naturalist, media icon, and celebrity champion of wolves, whose stance of a scientifically based activism elicited mixed feelings in late Franco’s Spain, was quickly drawn into the quarrel with shepherds, hunters, scholars, policymakers, and journalists. His involvement, against a backdrop of locally situated and environmentally related conflicts, allows us to analyze the ambivalent role of science, media, and celebrity in the establishment of the epistemological status of local/rural and outsider/urban knowledge in the construction of narratives about nature. In all, this case brings together official mechanisms of production of scientific knowledge, various forms of public and institutional engagement, a wide range of people’s everyday-life experiences, and the crucial involvement of the media.
期刊介绍:
Explore the fascinating world of Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, a journal that reveals the history of science as it has developed since the 18th century. HSNS offers in-depth articles on a wide range of scientific fields, their social and cultural histories and supporting institutions, including astronomy, geology, physics, genetics, natural history, chemistry, meteorology, and molecular biology. Widely regarded as a leading journal in the historiography of science and technology, HSNS increased its publication to five times per year in 2012 to expand its roster of pioneering articles and notable reviews by the most influential writers in the field.