The anthropology of traps: Concrete technologies and theoretical interfaces

Traps connect not only predator and prey, but mind and materiality, technology and landscape, and infrastructure and ecology. Through them bodies, knowledge practices, materials, and environments are assembled in transformative encounters which, because of their lethal agency, have emotive and moral...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Corsín Jiménez, Alberto, Nahum-Claudel, Chloe
Format: article
Status:Versión enviada para evaluación y publicación
Publication Date:2018
Country:España
Institution:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
Repository:DIGITAL.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
OAI Identifier:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/173060
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/173060
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Ecology
Human–animal relationships
Material culture
Technology
Traps
Description
Summary:Traps connect not only predator and prey, but mind and materiality, technology and landscape, and infrastructure and ecology. Through them bodies, knowledge practices, materials, and environments are assembled in transformative encounters which, because of their lethal agency, have emotive and moral force. In this Introduction we explore the conceptual bridges and disciplinary admixtures invited by ethnographic attention to traps. We review a history of attention to traps, which is in the main a history of neglect and epistemological bias. As humble hunting technologies traps have been secondary in status to the heroic chase, and the lifeways of trappers at the frontiers of empires have been neglected. Meanwhile traps have featured as archetypes and prototypes in evolutionist discourses focusing on technology, and human crafty intelligence in its invention and advancement. We trace these threads from the nineteenth century to contemporary anthropology and archaeology, and propose conceptual and practical lines for future analysis and research collaboration.