Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos

This article aims to report on a set of ethnoveterinary practices of mahouts and elephant health specialists (mo) in Laos. It is based on an ethnographic survey conducted in the villages of Tai-Lue and Tai-Lao in Sayabouri province in the northwest of the country. The corpus presented highlights sim...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nicolas Lainé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie 2020-06-01
Series:Revue d'ethnoécologie
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/5917
id doaj-bee9e2b1b79343c29a576d7966750177
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bee9e2b1b79343c29a576d79667501772020-11-25T03:15:24ZengLaboratoire Éco-anthropologie et EthnobiologieRevue d'ethnoécologie2267-24192020-06-011710.4000/ethnoecologie.5917Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au LaosNicolas LainéThis article aims to report on a set of ethnoveterinary practices of mahouts and elephant health specialists (mo) in Laos. It is based on an ethnographic survey conducted in the villages of Tai-Lue and Tai-Lao in Sayabouri province in the northwest of the country. The corpus presented highlights similarities in the treatment of others both in terms of ritual medicine and remedies. The survey also shows that in villages the men in charge of these animals do not claim to have any influence on the overall health of the pachyderms. According to them, elephants have a rich knowledge of the forest world, and are able to complete their treatments on their own. This aspect invited me to broaden the survey to focus on the elephant diet, based on the mahouts' knowledge of it. The conclusion emphasizes the need to include local knowledge in elephant conservation, in addition to biomedical knowledge. Drawing on the long cohabitation of humans and elephants in Asia, it also suggests hypotheses on the sharing and co-constuction of medical knowledge between humans and elephants, as well as their epistemological implications for apprehending local knowledge in anthropological inquiry.http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/5917ethno-veterinary practicesknowledge (human and non-human)pharmacopeiaelephantLaos
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas Lainé
spellingShingle Nicolas Lainé
Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
Revue d'ethnoécologie
ethno-veterinary practices
knowledge (human and non-human)
pharmacopeia
elephant
Laos
author_facet Nicolas Lainé
author_sort Nicolas Lainé
title Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
title_short Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
title_full Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
title_fullStr Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
title_full_unstemmed Pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au Laos
title_sort pratiques ethno-vétérinaires sur les éléphants au laos
publisher Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie
series Revue d'ethnoécologie
issn 2267-2419
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This article aims to report on a set of ethnoveterinary practices of mahouts and elephant health specialists (mo) in Laos. It is based on an ethnographic survey conducted in the villages of Tai-Lue and Tai-Lao in Sayabouri province in the northwest of the country. The corpus presented highlights similarities in the treatment of others both in terms of ritual medicine and remedies. The survey also shows that in villages the men in charge of these animals do not claim to have any influence on the overall health of the pachyderms. According to them, elephants have a rich knowledge of the forest world, and are able to complete their treatments on their own. This aspect invited me to broaden the survey to focus on the elephant diet, based on the mahouts' knowledge of it. The conclusion emphasizes the need to include local knowledge in elephant conservation, in addition to biomedical knowledge. Drawing on the long cohabitation of humans and elephants in Asia, it also suggests hypotheses on the sharing and co-constuction of medical knowledge between humans and elephants, as well as their epistemological implications for apprehending local knowledge in anthropological inquiry.
topic ethno-veterinary practices
knowledge (human and non-human)
pharmacopeia
elephant
Laos
url http://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/5917
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolaslaine pratiquesethnoveterinairessurleselephantsaulaos
_version_ 1724639659303108608