NATURALCULTURAL ENCOUNTERS IN BALI: Monkeys, Temples, Tourists, and Ethnoprimatology

Examining the interface between humans and other primates can illuminate how interspecies relationships create and maintain complex social and ecological spaces. Humans and macaque monkeys share ecologies that include cultural, historical, and physiological dimensions. In this essay, I examine such...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cultural anthropology 2010-11, Vol.25 (4), p.600-624
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description Examining the interface between humans and other primates can illuminate how interspecies relationships create and maintain complex social and ecological spaces. Humans and macaque monkeys share ecologies that include cultural, historical, and physiological dimensions. In this essay, I examine such ecologies while undertaking an ethnoprimatological project in Bali, Indonesia. This multispecies ethnography of humans and macaques demonstrates that human perceptions and land use intertwine with macaque social behavior and pathogen physiologies to affect local ecologies and economies for both species. In these contact zones where any clear boundary separating nature / culture is difficult to discern, I use the concept of "niche construction" and an ethnoprimatological lens to explore and understand these relationships. This article also serves as an invitation to move an ethnoprimatological approach away from the periphery and into a broader primatological and anthropological engagement with naturalcultural relations.
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source Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Anatomical systems
Animal behavior
Bali
Cultural anthropology
Ecological niches
Ecology
Ecotourism
Environmental effects
Environmental Factors
Ethnography
ethnoprimatology
Ethnozoology
Human Ecology
Humans
Indonesia
Land use
macaques
Monkeys
Monkeys & apes
Nature
natureculture
niche
niche construction
Perceptions
Primate behaviour
Primates
Primatology
Social Behavior
Social behaviour
Social factors
Social interaction
Tourism
title NATURALCULTURAL ENCOUNTERS IN BALI: Monkeys, Temples, Tourists, and Ethnoprimatology
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