首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine >A quiet harvest: linkage between ritual, seed selection and the historical use of the finger-bladed knife as a traditional plant breeding tool in Ifugao, Philippines
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A quiet harvest: linkage between ritual, seed selection and the historical use of the finger-bladed knife as a traditional plant breeding tool in Ifugao, Philippines

机译:安静的收成:菲律宾Ifugao的仪式,种子选择与指尖刀作为传统植物育种工具的历史使用之间的联系

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The transverse harvest knife, also commonly called the finger or finger-bladed knife, has been utilized by rice farmers in southeast Asia for many centuries. The finger knife persisted in many traditional cultures long after the introduction of the sickle, a tool which provided farmers with the means to execute a much faster harvest. Several theories in interpretative archaeology have attempted to account for this rejection of more modern technological innovations. These theories, which include community-based social organization ideas and practical reasons for the continued use of the finger knife, are presented in this paper. Here I suggest an alternate theory based on a re-interpretation of existing research and fusion of existing theories: the primary reason for the historical and continued use of the finger knife is for seed selection through a centuries old tradition of plant breeding. Though I accept the accuracy of the practical and community-based, socio-cultural reasons for the use of the finger knife put forth by other authors, I suggest that seed selection and genetic improvement was the driving factor in the use of the finger knife. Indeed, intricate planting and harvesting rituals, which both ensured and encouraged varietal conservation and improvement co-evolved with the use of the finger knife as the primary harvest tool due to its unique ability to aid the farmer in the art and science of seed selection. When combined with previous ideas, this interpretative theory, based on the connection between ethnoagronomy and material culture, may provide a more complete picture of the story around the persistence of the finger knife in traditional rice-growing cultures in southeast Asia. I focus my theory on the terrace-building Ifugao people in the mountainous Cordillera region of northcentral Philippines; however, to put the use of the finger into a wider regional context, I draw from examples of the use of the finger knife in other traditional cultures throughout the region of southeast Asia.
机译:横向收割刀,也通常称为手指或带刀片的刀,已经在东南亚的稻农中使用了多个世纪。镰刀引入后很长一段时间,指刀就在许多传统文化中持续存在,这种工具为农民提供了进行更快收获的手段。解释考古学中的几种理论试图解释这种对更现代技术创新的拒绝。本文介绍了这些理论,其中包括基于社区的社会组织思想以及继续使用手指刀的实际原因。在这里,我提出了一种基于对现有研究的重新解释和对现有理论的融合的替代理论:历史和持续使用手刀的主要原因是通过百年历史的植物育种传统来进行种子选择。尽管我接受其他作者提出的使用手刀的实用且基于社区的社会文化原因的准确性,但我建议选择种子和遗传改良是使用手刀的驱动因素。确实,复杂的播种和采伐仪式既确保并鼓励了品种的保存和改良,又由于其在农艺选择和选种方面的独特能力而将农用刀作为主要的收获工具。当与先前的思想相结合时,这种基于民族农艺学与物质文化之间联系的解释性理论,可以提供有关东南亚传统水稻种植文化中指尖刀的持久性的完整故事。我将理论重点放在菲律宾中北部山区科迪勒拉地区的梯田式Ifugao人上。但是,为了将手指的使用放到更广泛的区域环境中,我借鉴了整个东南亚地区其他传统文化中使用手指刀的示例。

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