Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1017503
Making milk, making persons: An account of milk production in the Rijeka region
Making milk, making persons: An account of milk production in the Rijeka region // Pozvano predavanje na INSTITUT ZA FILOZOFIJU I DRUŠTVENU TEORIJU | Univerzitet u Beogradu
Beograd, Srbija, 2019. (pozvano predavanje, podatak o recenziji nije dostupan, neobjavljeni rad, ostalo)
CROSBI ID: 1017503 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Making milk, making persons: An account of milk
production in the Rijeka region
Autori
Czerny, Sarah Caroline
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, neobjavljeni rad, ostalo
Skup
Pozvano predavanje na INSTITUT ZA FILOZOFIJU I DRUŠTVENU TEORIJU | Univerzitet u Beogradu
Mjesto i datum
Beograd, Srbija, 25.01.2019
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Pozvano predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Podatak o recenziji nije dostupan
Ključne riječi
Milk, human–microbe relations, Croatia, Pasteurianism
Sažetak
For anyone with an interest in human and animal relations, the substance of milk has the potential to be of great analytical interest because it is perhaps the only bodily substance that is regularly produced and consumed by both humans and nonhumans. As I will outline at the start of this lecture, there is nevertheless what I perceive to be a shortfall within social science analysis about its production and consumption. For the most part, scholars place their analytical focus on either human or nonhuman milk production and consumption. As a result, scholarly work appears to itself be contributing to the construction of the human-nonhuman divide that has been the source of so much critique in anthropological writing and wider. In this lecture I am going to argue that this “shortcoming” should be redressed by considering both human and nonhuman milk production and consumption at the same time. Using examples from ethnographic fieldwork in the Rijeka region, I contend that much can be analytically gained by exploring how humans work to “animalize” or “humanize” milk in their everyday practices and relations. However, I also caution that we must not only approach milk as a substance that is shaped into an human or animal product by human labour. As I draw out in the final part of this lecture, milk also has considerable influence into shaping the form that humans take as humans and animals as animals.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Etnologija i antropologija