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Animal Release and the Sacrificial Ethos in Inner Asia
Author Swancutt, Katherine (著)
Source Inner Asia
Volumev.22 n.2 Special Section
Date2020.11
Pages199–216
PublisherBrill
Publisher Url http://www.brill.nl/
LocationLeiden, the Netherlands [萊登, 荷蘭]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
Note1. Special Section: Multispecies Co-existence in Inner Asia

2. Author Affiliation: King’s College London, UK
Keywordanimal release; ethics; mythopoetic; paradox; sacrifice; scapegoat; Mongolia; Southwest China
AbstractAnimal release is often understood as the practice of freeing an animal from human consumption or the burden of labour. Typically associated with various Buddhist or Daoist cosmologies in which liberating an animal is a merit-making act, animal release tends to be conceptualised in altruistic terms. Yet the diverse forms that sacrifice and animal release take across Inner Asia suggest that the focus of analysis sometimes shifts from a concern with freeing animals to protecting the human imperative to live. Introducing new ethnography on the ethical underpinnings of sacrifice among Buryats in northeast Mongolia and the Nuosu of southwest China, I propose that animal release can be an act of restrained violence that evokes the mythopoetic contours of human–animal relations, animal sentience and human self-preservation. Offering case studies on scapegoats, deferred sacrifice, and contingent forms of slaughter, I show how Buryats and Nuosu manage the ethical tensions posed by sacrifice.
Table of contentsAbstract 199
Keywords 199
1. The Ethics of Releasing a Scapegoat 202
2. The Mythopoetics of Deferred Sacrifice and Contingent Slaughter 207
3. Concluding Reflections on Paradox and the Ethical Tensions in Sacrifice 214
Acknowledgements 215
Reference 215
ISSN14648172 (P); 22105018 (E)
DOI10.1163/22105018-12340147
Hits92
Created date2024.06.19
Modified date2024.06.25



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