Author:
Ko, Wing Tung Jada
School:
Harvard University
Year:
2022
Abstract:
In the world we currently live in, we hear about the loss of a slice of biodiversity almost every day. Meanwhile, stories about the repopulation and even overpopulation of some species make us question why certain living organisms are more susceptible to extinction than the others. While not a single explanation or narrative characterizes the disappearance of an infinite array of life forms, as a zooarchaeologist whose work involves bringing back to our living memories animals that no longer exist or no longer exist in their archaic forms, I cannot help but wonder if the survival of a species has anything to do with how it is conceptualized and remembered by human societies.
My dissertation dissects the meanings, implications, and workings of what I have coined the Politics of Ecological Memory to address this concern. The term deals with the intersections between power dynamics, social memory, and human-animal relationships. It highlights the correlations between the political means by which certain animals are (to be) remembered, the survival of these animals, and the socio-cultural developments and survival of human societies. I argue that the Politics of Ecological Memory is a ubiquitous process in societies at different socio-political scales in both the present and the past, and bring together zooarchaeological analyses with historical and ethnographic research to reconstruct the longue durée of human interactions with animals and the environments within which they live, with a focus in the geo-political boundaries defining China today.
The central focus of empirical discussions concerns archaeofaunal datasets from three archaeological sites namely Xiaosungang (5200-4800 B.C.), Nanchengzi (3100-1450 B.C.), and Taijiasi (1400-1250 B.C.) located in the middle reaches of the Huai River in Anhui Province. Using these data, I reconstruct the processes by which animals were transformed from inherent members of the biosphere to mnemonic devices that served the needs to construct and sustain different forms of power relations among and between societies. Through these processes, many animals were extracted and anthropogenically reproduced to maintain stable sources of social power. Rather than a linear narrative about how animals are remembered and serve similar political functions, I demonstrate through zooachaeological and historical evidence that the political significance of animals is constantly invented and re-invented, and can even be completely forgotten as human and animal niches overlap. I conclude the dissertation by providing the example of the changing roles various species of freshwater turtles played in China through time to point out how, despite changes in political agendas since prehistory in relation to which these animals were attributed with changing social values, these changes can have lingering effects on the survival of the animals in the long-run.
This dissertation is an attempt to not only begin a conversation questioning how social memory and politics affect the integrity of the biosphere from the perspective of zooarchaeology, but also provide answers to the question “what it means to lose a species?” particularly in the world we live in today.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1 Introduction: Embracing my Inner Biophilia
Chapter 2 The Becoming of a Political Animal
Chapter 3 Visualizing the Anhui Middle Huai River Valley (AMHRV)
Chapter 4 The Beginning of a Political Relationship with the Biosphere in the AMHRV:
Zooarchaeological Analysis of Xiaosungang (5200-4600 B.C.)
Chapter 5 Growing Interactions Beyond the AMHRV: Zooarchaeological Analysis of
Nanchengzi (3100-1450 B.C.)
Chapter 6 Animals as Local Sources of State Power: Zooarchaeological Analysis of Taijiasi
(1400-1250 B.C.)
Chapter 7 Pathways to the Politics of Ecological Memory in the AMHRV
Chapter 8 Turtles and their Changing Roles in the AMHRV and Beyond
Chapter 10 Conclusions: Stepping Back into Nature