“That-which-must-not-be-named”: hunting, secrecy, and the ontology of meat in northeast China
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34959Dato
2024-07-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Fraser, Richard AlanSammendrag
In this paper, I describe the practice of sharing and eating wild
meat amongst the Orochen in northeast China, a community of
hunters who are no longer allowed to hunt due to state conservation policies. I show how for Orochen meat is the material
intermediary between the human and nonhuman worlds, offered
to the fire before meals and to animal spirit-masters during hunting. I suggest this demands reflection of what we might call the
ontology of meat: that is, how it is experienced as an extra-ordinary and relational substance with the ‘lived’ capacity to act. I
show how this contrasts with the Chinese state, which sees wild
meat as a material substance only and, in the context of conservation, as something to be measured and controlled through the
protection of wild animals. I suggest that, for the Orochen, to eat
and share wild meat is an act of everyday resistance embedded
in secrecy, as well as a way of rendering into action their ontology of relational existence and participation in the wider sociocosmic economy of sharing.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Fraser R. “That-which-must-not-be-named”: hunting, secrecy, and the ontology of meat in northeast China. Asian Anthropology. 2024Metadata
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