五月天青色头像情侣网名,国产亚洲av片在线观看18女人,黑人巨茎大战俄罗斯美女,扒下她的小内裤打屁股

歡迎光臨散文網(wǎng) 會員登陸 & 注冊

【TED-ED 700集】P5 "A brief history of cannibalism"

2023-02-25 07:26 作者:IceBearBestbear  | 我要投稿

"A brief history of cannibalism" by Bill Schutt

VIDEO:?【TED-ED 700集】B站最好英語合集,刷一遍絕對能讓你英語口語起飛!

Vocabulary: 可惡,別忘了看


15th-century Europeans believed they had hit upon a miracle cure: a remedy for epilepsy, hemorrhage, bruising, nausea, and virtually any other medical ailment. This brown powder could be mixed into drinks, made into salves or eaten straight up. It was known as mumia and made by grinding up mummified human flesh.

hit upon

miracle

remedy

epilepsy

hemorrhage

bruising

nausea

virtually

ailment

salve

mumia

grind up

mummified

flesh

The word "cannibal" dates from the time of Christopher Columbus; in fact, Columbus may even have coined it himself. After coming ashore on the island of Guadaloupe, Columbus' initial reports back to the Queen of Spain described the indigenous people as friendly and peaceful— though he did mention rumors of a group called the Caribs, who made violent raids and then cooked and ate their prisoners. In response, Queen Isabella granted permission to capture and enslave anyone who ate human flesh. When the island failed to produce the gold Columbus was looking for, he began to label anyone who resisted his plundering and kidnapping as a Caribe. Somewhere along the way, the word "Carib" became "Canibe" and then "Cannibal." First used by colonizers to dehumanize indigenous people, it has since been applied to anyone who eats human flesh.

cannibal

date from

coin

ashore

indigenous

rumor

raid

prisoner

in response

grant

permission

capture

enslave

resist

plunder

kidnap

colonizer

dehumanize

So the term comes from an account that wasn't based on hard evidence, but cannibalism does have a real and much more complex history. It has taken diverse forms— sometimes, as with mumia, it doesn't involved recognizable parts of the human body. The reasons for cannibalistic practices have varied, too. Across cultures and time periods, there's evidence of survival cannibalism, when people living through a famine, siege or ill-fated expedition had to either eat the bodies of the dead or starve to death themselves. But it's also been quite common for cultures to normalize some form of eating human flesh under ordinary circumstances. Because of false accounts like Columbus's, it's difficult to say exactly how common cultural cannibalism has been— but there are still some examples of accepted cannibalistic practices from within the cultures practicing them.

cannibalism

involved

recognizable

cannibalistic'vary

famine

siege

ill-fated ecpedition

starve

normalize

ordinary

circumstances

Take the medicinal cannibalism in Europe during Columbus's time. Starting in the 15th century, the demand for mumia increased. At first, stolen mummies from Egypt supplied the mumia craze, but soon the demand was too great to be sustained on Egyptian mummies alone, and opportunists stole bodies from European cemeteries to turn into mumia. Use of mumia continued for hundreds of years. It was listed in the Merck index, a popular medical encyclopedia, into the 20th century. And ground up mummies were far from the only remedy made from human flesh that was common throughout Europe. Blood, in either liquid or powdered form, was used to treat epilepsy, while human liver, gall stones, oil distilled from human brains, and pulverized hearts were popular medical concoctions.

demand?

sustained

opportunists?

index

encyclopedia

ground up

epilepsy

gall?

distilled?

pulverized

concoctions

In China, the written record of socially accepted cannibalism goes back almost 2,000 years. One particularly common form of cannibalism appears to have been filial cannibalism, where adult sons and daughters would offer a piece of their own flesh to their parents. This was typically offered as a last-ditch attempt to cure a sick parent, and wasn't fatal to their offspring— it usually involved flesh from the thigh or, less often, a finger.

filial

offspring

Cannibalistic funerary rites are another form of culturally sanctioned cannibalism. Perhaps the best-known example came from the Fore people of New Guinea. Through the mid-20th century, members of the community would, if possible, make their funerary preferences known in advance, sometimes requesting that family members gather to consume the body after death. Tragically, though these rituals honored the deceased, they also spread a deadly disease known as kuru through the community.

funerary

sanctioned

funerary?preferences?

consume?

tragically

rituals?

kuru?

fictionalized

verifiable

gaps

accusing

millennia


【TED-ED 700集】P5 "A brief history of cannibalism"的評論 (共 條)

分享到微博請遵守國家法律
乐业县| 富宁县| 高唐县| 贺兰县| 民丰县| 甘德县| 禄丰县| 防城港市| 吴旗县| 保山市| 双辽市| 丽水市| 农安县| 布尔津县| 华坪县| 兴业县| 伊宁县| 梁平县| 新沂市| 子洲县| 烟台市| 清原| 柳州市| 仪征市| 华阴市| 南昌县| 桃园市| 长垣县| 台中县| 余干县| 个旧市| 昌宁县| 中宁县| 调兵山市| 曲周县| 宿松县| 西林县| 华容县| 夏河县| 河间市| 克山县|