阿玛比:一个日本预言的嵌合体和在政治怪物中的时计

C. Merli
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020-2022年给我们留下了流行病和政治上的怪物,在相当长一段时间内都不会被遗忘。COVID-19大流行促使我们思考一场瘟疫的可能性,这场瘟疫不仅局限于全球南方的“看不见的”疾病领域,还严重影响到全球北方,并有可能以与1918年流感大流行类似的方式消灭世界上大量人口。政府陷入两难的境地,要么为生活提供特权,要么为经济提供特权,优生学就像历史上的幽灵一样抬头。来自日本民间传说的善良的海洋怪物Amabie是一个先知yōkai,最初在日本流行起来,很快在全球范围内占据了突出地位,成为COVID-19大流行的标志。我质疑人们如何利用这个来自海洋和历史深处的嵌合生物来处理存在的不确定性和不正常的生活,使它成为连接时间和空间的时标。这些水生生物构成了一个政治、环境和健康灾难融合在一起的模糊世界。
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The Amabie: A Japanese prophetic chimera and chronotope amid political monstrosities
The years 2020-2022 engraved our existence with epidemiological and political monstrosities that will not be forgotten for quite some time. The COVID-19 pandemic dragged us to contemplating the possibilities of a plague that, rather than being confined to the global south’s ‘invisible’ territories of diseases, heavily affected the global north and with the prospect of wiping out a large number of the world’s population in a similar manner to that of the 1918 influenza epidemic. Governments were caught between choices to either privilege lives or economies and eugenics reared its head as a spectre from the historical past. A benign marine monster, the Amabie, a prophetic yōkai from Japanese folklore, became popular, initially in Japan and, rather rapidly on a global scale, assumed a prominent position, becoming an icon for the COVID-19 pandemic. I interrogate how people resorted to this chimeric creature from marine and historical depths to deal with existential uncertainty and abnormal lives, rendering it a chronotope that connects times and spaces. Such aquapelagic creatures frame the ambiguity of a world where political, environmental and health disasters merge.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
20.00%
发文量
38
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊介绍: Shima publishes: Theoretical and/or comparative studies of island, marine, lacustrine or riverine cultures Case studies of island, marine, lacustrine or riverine cultures Accounts of collaborative research and development projects in island, marine, lacustrine or riverine locations Analyses of "island-like" insular spaces (such as peninsular "almost islands," enclaves, exclaves and micronations) Analyses of fictional representations of islands, "islandness," oceanic, lacustrine and riverine issues In-depth "feature" reviews of publications, media texts, exhibitions, events etc. concerning the above Photo and Video Essays on any aspects of the above
期刊最新文献
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