In 1985, Harvard University botanist Wade Davis traveled to Haiti in search of the poison powder called coupe poudre, allegedly used to cause the death-like trance state induced in the process of zombification. His sponsors believed that if such a drug existed it would have valuable pharmacological usage. He published the results of his findings in two books The Serpent and the Rainbow (1985), and Passage of Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie (1988). In essence, Davis claimed that yes, there are indeed "zombies," and that they are created, at least in part, by a poisonous powder. But, Davis maintains that the poison in and of itself is not enough to create a zombie, rather that "set and setting" must be taken into account. This is the distinction that defines the field of ethnobiology, the idea that physical, social and psychological settings inform biological interactions.
-Jakki Rowlett in The Ethnobiology and Ethics of the Haitian Zombie
11.20.2005
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6 comments:
a pleasure read or for a class...?
ZOmbie zombie
Now THAT'S where psychology gets interesting.
cos, I learn about this in Anthro and then I had to let my friend matt knapp know because he's deathly concerned about the undead.
your anthro class is way cooler than the one i took. enjoy turkey
your anthro class is way cooler than the one i took. enjoy turkey
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