Results for 'Amerindian'

74 found
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  1.  30
    Amerindians, Europeans, Makiritare, Mestizos, Puerto Rican, and Quechua: Categorical Heterogeneity in Latin American Human Biology.Santiago José Molina - 2017 - Perspectives on Science 25 (5):655-679.
    The past decade has seen a flurry of social scientific research on the use of racial categories in human genetics research. This literature has critically analyzed how U.S. race relations are being shaped by and themselves shaping research on human biological difference and disease. Recent work, however, suggests that the particular configurations of science and ethnoracial politics in the US are not exportable. Instead, research on human biology in other contexts reveals the importance of not just racial categories, but national, (...)
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  2.  8
    Amerindian Perspectivism in the Mythicized Discourses of Popular Catholicism in the Amazon.Marcos Vinicius Freitas Reis & Marcos Paulo Torres Pereira - 2020 - Dialogos 24 (2):259-291.
    This article aims to problematize, through the theoretical contributions of the post-colonial studies, the catholic church’s colonization project towards the Amapaense Amazon’s popular catholicism - such as the Myth of Cobra Grande - constituted as a project evolved around eurocentric and judeo-christian assumptions to the detriment of afro-amerindian cultural, identity and religious expressions, of catholic communities in the urban and rural areas of the brazilian Amazon. The amazonian population develops strategies of resistance and re-existence in order to maintain their (...)
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  3. Amerindian heterotopia and the resistance against the Brazilian ethnocide.Gustavo Ruiz da Silva - 2022 - Filosofia E Educação 3 (13):2725–2741.
    This article aims, starting from a contemporary problem (the destruction of indigenous lives and cultures in Brazil), to think about ethical questions – especially in what concerns other ways of constituting subjectivity and (dis)obedience. Thus, the indigenous obedience issue will be based on Pierre Clastres’ societies against the State, giving an extent to Viveiros de Castros and possible relationships with our western reality. The subjectivity issue, then, will be approached based on what was pointed out to us by Michel Foucault. (...)
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  4. Legal Modernity and Early Amerindian Laws.William Conklin - 1999 - Sociology of Law, Social Problems and Legal Policy:115-128.
    This essay claims that the violence characterizing the 20th century has been coloured by the clash of two very different senses of legal authority. These two senses of legal authority correspond with two very different contexts of civil violence: state secession and the violence characterizing a challenge to a state-centric legal authority. Conklin argues that the modern legal authority represents a quest for a source or foundation. Such a sense of legal authority, according to Conklin, clashes such a view with (...)
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  5.  11
    The Amerindians of Guyana: a biological review.D. R. Brothwell - 1967 - The Eugenics Review 59 (1):22.
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  6.  4
    Amerindian rebirth and Buddhist karma: an anthropologist's reflections on comparative religious ethics.Gananath Obeyesekere - 1996 - Amsterdam: Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.
  7.  68
    Was there an Amerindian Atlantic? Reflections on the limits of a historiographical concept.Paul Cohen - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (4):388-410.
    Proponents of the increasingly prominent “Atlantic history” paradigm argue that ocean-centered, transnational perspectives shed crucial light on connections which tied together Europe, Africa and the Americas in the early modern period, and which older forms of national and imperial histories obscured. In spite of these scholars’ calls for the construction of a truly inclusive history of the Atlantic basin and all its inhabitants, Amerindian peoples have received relatively little attention in the work of Atlantic historians. This article examines the (...)
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  8.  21
    Divergences and Convergences of Perspective: Amerindian Perspectivism, Phenomenology, and Speculative Realism.Ignas Šatkauskas - 2022 - Open Philosophy 5 (1):308-329.
    According to Viveiros de Castro, comparison as ontology defines the ontological turn in anthropology. It presents a necessity for philosophy to approach the matter with comparative strategy. Morten Pedersen claims that ontological turn should be interpreted as a fulfillment of an anthropological version of Husserl’s method. Thus, phenomenology enters the field of interest along with its critique in Speculative Realism. In this article, we will see clearly why this selection is not accidental but rather unavoidable. Amerindian perspectivism necessitates the (...)
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  9.  38
    Imagining karma: ethical transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist, and Greek rebirth.Gananath Obeyesekere - 2002 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    With Imagining Karma, Gananath Obeyesekere embarks on the very first comparison of rebirth concepts across a wide range of cultures. Exploring in rich detail the beliefs of small-scale societies of West Africa, Melanesia, traditional Siberia, Canada, and the northwest coast of North America, Obeyesekere compares their ideas with those of the ancient and modern Indic civilizations and with the Greek rebirth theories of Pythagoras, Empedocles, Pindar, and Plato. His groundbreaking and authoritative discussion decenters the popular notion that India was the (...)
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  10.  7
    France's America and Amerindians: Image and reality.Cornelius J. Jaenen - 1985 - History of European Ideas 6 (4):405-420.
  11.  23
    The ethics of anthropology and Amerindian research: reporting on environmental degradation and warfare.Richard J. Chacon & Ruben G. Mendoza (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Springer.
    This work documents the ethical dilemmas faced by anthropologists and researchers in general when investigating Amerindian communities.
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  12.  17
    Dressing like the Great King: Amerindian Perspectives on Persian Fashion in Classical Athens.S. Douglas Olson - 2021 - Polis 38 (1):9-20.
    This paper examines the phenomenon of individual Athenians adopting elements of Persian clothing, making use of exotic items such as gold and silver drinking vessels, and the like, by comparison to what I argue is a similar sort of contact and exchange involving the European fabric trade and evolving standards of dress and fashion in the Early Modern Atlantic. The ancient literary and archaeological sources discussed document the reaction of a relatively insignificant, marginal people to the dress practices of a (...)
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  13.  20
    Endless History: Hegel's Flawed Account of Amerindians.Filipe Campello - forthcoming - Hegel Bulletin:1-21.
    In this article, I argue that Hegel's treatment of Amerindian peoples is rooted in an exclusionary perspective of Reason, which establishes a particular form of life as its defining standard-bearer. This stance results in a distinct form of epistemic misrecognition and injustice that disregards the potential contributions of Amerindian resources and worldviews to the lexicon stablished throughout the modernity. To present an alternative viewpoint, I examine the insights of Yanomami shaman Davi Kopenawa, whose pluriversal conception of reason and (...)
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  14.  29
    Imagining Karma, Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist and Greek Rebirth (review).A. L. Herman - 2004 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):303-306.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Imagining Karma, Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist, and Greek RebirthA. L. HermanImagining Karma, Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist, and Greek Rebirth. By Gananath Obeyesekere. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. 448 pp.Gananath Obeyesekere, professor emeritus of anthropology at Princeton University, is probably one of the world's greatest living anthropologists. The proof of that assertion lies in this his latest work on comparative anthropology, a study of (...)
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  15. Bartolomé de las Casas and the Defense of Amerindian Rights: A Brief History with Documents .[author unknown] - 2020
     
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  16.  29
    Unfurling western notions of nature and Amerindian alternatives.Egleé L. Zent - 2015 - Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 15 (2):105-123.
  17.  17
    The Invention of Savage Society: Amerindian Religion and Society in Acosta's Anthropological Theology.Girolamo Imbruglia - 2014 - History of European Ideas 40 (3):291-311.
    SummaryThe problem of converting the Amerindian world to Catholicism was given a radically new solution, both at a theoretical and a missionary level, by the Jesuit Acosta: since American societies were of a completely different nature to Mediterranean ones, the preaching of the Gospel, too, had to be different from the classical approach. He gave a new definition to both preaching and American societies, especially the latter's religion and social organisation. Acosta's approach to American sauvagerie was pioneering; he conceptualised (...)
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  18.  19
    Global Knowledge on the Move: Itineraries, Amerindian Narratives, and Deep Histories of Science.Neil Safier - 2010 - Isis 101 (1):133-145.
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  19.  16
    ‘That they will be capable of governing themselves’: Knowledge of Amerindian Difference and early modern arts of governance in the Spanish Colonial Antilles.Timothy Bowers Vasko - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (3):24-48.
    Contrary to conventional accounts, critical knowledge of the cultural differences of Amerindian peoples was not absent in the early Conquest of the Americas. It was indeed a constitutive element of that process. The knowledge, strategies, and institutions of early Conquest relied on, and reproduced, Amerindian difference within the Spanish Empire as an essential element of that empire’s continued claims to legitimate authority. I demonstrate this through a focus on three parallel and sometimes overlapping texts: Ramón Pané’s Indian Antiquities; (...)
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  20.  53
    Exchanging Perspectives: The Transformation of Objects into Subjects in Amerindian Ontologies.Eduardo Batalha Viveiros de Castro - forthcoming - Common Knowledge 10 (3):463-484.
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  21.  10
    Vitoria’s Ideas of Supernatural and Natural Sovereignty: Adam and Eve’s Marriage, the Uncivil Amerindians, and the Global Christian Nation.Toy-Fung Tung - 2014 - Journal of the History of Ideas 75 (1):45-68.
  22.  6
    Europe and its encounter with the Amerindians: An introduction.Dario Fernández-Morera - 1985 - History of European Ideas 6 (4):379-383.
  23.  5
    The Effect of Smallpox on the Destiny of the AmerindianE. Wagner Stearn Allen E. Stearn.Mark Graubard - 1947 - Isis 37 (1/2):124-125.
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  24.  26
    Obeyesekere (G.) Imagining Karma. Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist, and Greek Rebirth. (Comparative Studies in Religion and Society 14.) Pp. xxx + 448, ills. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2002. Paper, £17.95, US$24.95 (Cased, £40, US$60). ISBN: 0-520-23243-7 (0-520-23220-8 hbk). [REVIEW]Emily Kearns - 2006 - The Classical Review 56 (02):494-.
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  25.  18
    Obeyesekere Imagining Karma. Ethical Transformation in Amerindian, Buddhist, and Greek Rebirth. Pp. xxx + 448, ills. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2002. Paper, £17.95, US$24.95 . ISBN: 0-520-23243-7. [REVIEW]Emily Kearns - 2006 - The Classical Review 56 (2):494-496.
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  26.  11
    Joan Leopold. Prix Volney Essay Series. Volume 1A: The Prix Volney: Its History and Significance for the Development of Linguistic Research; Volume 1B: The Prix Volney: Its History and Significance for the Development of Linguistic Research; Volume 2: Early Nineteenth‐Century Contributions to General and Amerindian Linguistics: Du Ponceau and Rafinesque; Volume 3: Contributions to Comparative Indo‐European, African, and Chinese Linguistics. xxvi + xxvii + 995 + viii + 340 + x + 518 pp., frontis., illus., figs., tables, apps., index. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000. $1,200, £700. [REVIEW]Giorgio Graffi - 2003 - Isis 94 (1):177-178.
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  27.  4
    The Effect of Smallpox on the Destiny of the Amerindian by E. Wagner Stearn; Allen E. Stearn. [REVIEW]Mark Graubard - 1947 - Isis 37:124-125.
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  28.  63
    John Locke on Native Right, Colonial Possession, and the Concept of Vacuum domicilium.Paul Corcoran - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (3):225-250.
    The early paragraphs of John Locke’s Second Treatise of Government describe a poetic idyll of property acquisition widely supposed by contemporary theorists and historians to have cast the template for imperial possessions in the New World. This reading ignores the surprises lurking in Locke’s later chapters on conquest, usurpation, and tyranny, where he affirms that native rights to lands and possessions survive to succeeding generations. Locke warned his readers that this “will seem a strange doctrine, it being quite contrary to (...)
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  29.  37
    The Racism of Philosophy’s Fear of Cultural Relativism.Shuchen Xiang - 2020 - Journal of World Philosophies 5 (1):99-120.
    By looking at a canonical article representing academic philosophy’s orthodox view against cultural relativism, James Rachels’ “The Challenge of Cultural Relativism,” this paper argues that current mainstream western academic philosophy’s fear of cultural relativism is premised on a fear of the racial Other. The examples that Rachels marshals against cultural relativism default to the persistent, ubiquitous, and age-old stereotypes about the savage/barbarian Other that have dominated the history of western engagement with the non-western world. What academic philosophy fears about cultural (...)
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  30.  50
    Hierarchies of Foreignness: The Writing of Man in the New World.Dana Miranda - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):100-114.
    Through transatlantic contact and subsequent debates, the “humanity” of Amerindians was first established for Europeans according to the dictates of philosophical anthropology and theology. This hierarchical and colonial anthropology is problematic precisely because it normalizes a singular, indigenous way of “being human” as the only correct and universal formulation of the “human being,” i.e., Man. Consequently, people that live outside this constructed definition are exposed to dispossession, dehumanization, and genocide because they are deemed outside the bounds of Mankind. Through a (...)
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  31.  5
    A Dimensão Ontológica do Antropoceno: Pensamento Ameríndio e Algumas Ideias para Adiar o Fim do Mundo.Juliana Neuenschwander-Magalhães - 2023 - Rivista Italiana di Filosofia Politica 3:57-76.
    This article observes the imagination of the end of the world in the Anthropocene era and, at the same time, intends, from an anthropological turn that considers other possibilities of human existence on Earth, to imagine how Amerindian cosmovision can promote not only an ontological but also an epistemological turn in the field of contemporary law and politics. A conflicted but not impossible dialogue between the naturalistic matrix of Western thought and Amerindian multinaturalism, in search of “ideas to (...)
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  32.  44
    Shamanic Microscopy: Cellular Souls, Microbial Spirits.César E. Giraldo Herrera - 2018 - Anthropology of Consciousness 29 (1):8-43.
    In Amerindian ontologies, hallucinations or visions, rather than being dismissed as delusions or symbolic constructs, are recognized as means of perceptual access to physical reality. Lowland South American shamans claim to be able to diagnose and treat infectious diseases, and to assess the status of wildlife resources through interactions with pathogenic agents perceived in visions. This essay examines some perceptual capabilities that shamans might be employing to explore their physical reality. The structure of the eye affords a form of (...)
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  33.  23
    Virilité et « ensauvagement ».Gilles Havard - 2008 - Clio 27:57-74.
    Le corps du coureur de bois, ce personnage nord-américain de la traite des fourrures, dénigré par les élites coloniales, parfois qualifié d’« Indien blanc » par l’historiographie, peut servir de support à l’étude des processus d’acculturation euro-indiens. Au contact des sociétés autochtones, ce corps échappe à certaines des normes de la société coloniale. Épilation de la barbe, séances de tatouage, rituels de guérison chamanique et d’hospitalité sexuelle, intimité avec les femmes autochtones, tout concourt à modifier le rapport au corps des (...)
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  34. Understanding pictures.Dominic Lopes - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    There is not one but many ways to picture the world--Australian "x-ray" pictures, cubish collages, Amerindian split-style figures, and pictures in two-point perspective each draw attention to different features of what they represent. Understanding Pictures argues that this diversity is the central fact with which a theory of figurative pictures must reckon. Lopes advances the theory that identifying pictures' subjects is akin to recognizing objects whose appearances have changed over time. He develops a schema for categorizing the different ways (...)
  35.  55
    Exchanging Perspectives.Eduardo Viveiros de Castro - 2019 - Common Knowledge 25 (1-3):21-42.
    Originally published in 2004 in the Common Knowledge symposium “Talking Peace with Gods,” this article elaborates the nature and consequences of the perspectivist cosmologies of Amerindian societies. Contemporary Western cosmologies regard humans as ex-animals who became differentiated from other nonhuman species through the acquisition of advanced cognitive capacities. Amerindian cultures, by contrast, regard animals as ex-humans who became differentiated from both modern humans and other animal species via a series of physical adaptations. Underneath these physical differences, both humans (...)
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  36.  15
    Where is the Great Outdoors of Meillassoux’s Speculative Materialism?Ignas Šatkauskas - 2020 - Open Philosophy 3 (1):102-118.
    Quentin Meillassoux’s speculative materialism aims to define access to reality of the natural world apart from its giveness to sentient subjects. This world apart is designated by Meillassoux as the “Great Outdoors” which was marginalized as a topic of philosophy after Kant’s critiques. The question of the incommensurability of human subjects and physical objects is taken up by Meillassoux and addressed by allowing mathematizable properties of physical objects to be referred to objectively in mathematical statements. In this paper we follow (...)
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  37.  11
    Cannibal Metaphysics.Eduardo Viveiros de Castro - 2014 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    The iconoclastic Brazilian anthropologist and theoretician Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, well known in his discipline for helping initiate its “ontological turn,” offers a vision of anthropology as “the practice of the permanent decolonization of thought.” After showing that Amazonian and other Amerindian groups inhabit a radically different conceptual universe than ours—in which nature and culture, human and nonhuman, subject and object are conceived in terms that reverse our own—he presents the case for anthropology as the study of such “other” (...)
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  38. Feminist history of colonial science.Londa Schiebinger - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (1):233-254.
    : This essay offers a short overview of feminist history of science and introduces a new project into that history, namely feminist history of colonial science. My case study focuses on eighteenth-century voyages of scientific discovery and reveals how gender relations in Europe and the colonies honed selective collecting practices. Cultural, economic, and political trends discouraged the transfer from the New World to the Old of abortifacients (widely used by Amerindian and African women in the West Indies).1.
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  39.  14
    Imagination and the Poetics of Being and Becoming an Other in Amazonia.James Andrew Whitaker - 2018 - Anthropology of Consciousness 29 (1):120-131.
    This essay considers the role of the imagination in the envisioning and poetic construction of future being and becoming in Amazonia. Poetic construction is the process whereby the assembled forms that emerge from the imagination are brought out into the world of the senses. Imaginative envisioning and poetic construction are the means by which diverse ontologies of humans, animals, and spirits are articulated into particular visions of future transformation that posit a becoming from humanity to otherness in Amazonia. This essay (...)
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  40.  22
    Of archipelagos and arrows.Debbora Battaglia - 2011 - Common Knowledge 17 (1):151-154.
    These comments on Eduardo Viveiros de Castro's article, “Zeno and the Art of Anthropology,” emphasize, first, his engagement with ideas of Gilles Deleuze that open to the political dimension of Amerindian perspectivism and to a “multinatural” understanding of human-to-environment relations; these form the foundation of postdevelopment action in this part of the world and orient actors' “postures of attention” to power relations. Second, this commentary raises questions concerning arrows—archetypal of the protentive element of Amerindian “speculative ontology” and, as (...)
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  41.  23
    Le progrès des gauches en Amérique latine : gouvernements, mouvements sociaux et luttes indigènes.Gérard Duménil, Michael Löwy & Maurice Lemoine - 2007 - Actuel Marx 42 (2):111-125.
    The Progress of the Left in Latin America: Governments, Social Movements, the Struggles of the Amerindian Populations Gérard Duménil and Michaël Löwy here interview Michel Lemoine about the nature of the governments currently in office in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Bolivia and Venezuela. What contribution can these governments make to the task of establishing an anti-imperialist front? What are the specific features of the Latin American resistance to neo-liberalism, in view of the articulation between this resistance and the struggles of (...)
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  42.  70
    Artificial intelligence and de las Casas: A 1492 resonance.Alejandro Garcia-Rivera - 1993 - Zygon 28 (4):543-550.
    . A comparison is made between two unlikely debates over intelligence. One debate took place in 1550 at Valladolid, Spain, between Bartolomé de las Casas and Juan Gines de Sepúlveda over the intelligence of the Amerindian. The other debate is contemporary, between John Searle and various representatives of the “strong” artificial intelligence community over the adequacy of the Turing test for intelligence. Although the contemporary debate has yet to die down, the Valladolid debate has been over for four hundred (...)
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  43.  44
    Le progrès des gauches en Amérique latine : gouvernements, mouvements sociaux et luttes indigènes.Michael Löwy - 2007 - Actuel Marx 42 (2):111-125.
    The Progress of the Left in Latin America: Governments, Social Movements, the Struggles of the Amerindian Populations Gérard Duménil and Michaël Löwy here interview Michel Lemoine about the nature of the governments currently in office in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Bolivia and Venezuela. What contribution can these governments make to the task of establishing an anti-imperialist front? What are the specific features of the Latin American resistance to neo-liberalism, in view of the articulation between this resistance and the struggles of (...)
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  44. Pêro Vaz de Caminha e a Figura da Repetição: Uma Revisitação Histórico-filosófica da Carta do Achamento do Brasil.Eurico Carvalho - 2021 - Portuguese Studies Review 29 (2):9-53.
    The Letter from Pero Vaz de Caminha to the King of Portugal, Manuel I, is a unique document because its account of first contact with a people unknown in Europe up to that time may be regarded as evidence of the anthropological impossibility of a neutral gaze. This is an asymmetric testimony, as we do not possess (for obvious reasons) the Amerindian counterpart of European discourse. Although the letter’s author is someone who fully assumes the objectivity claim, we must (...)
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  45.  21
    Ecology of the Virtual.Peter Pál Pelbart - 2023 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 17 (3):376-386.
    Félix Guattari mentioned an ‘ecology of the virtual’. This notion is developed in this article along two dimensions. The first dimension, which is conceptual, relates the mental or subjective ecology of The Three Ecologies to the ‘functors’ of Schizoanalytic Cartographies. The other dimension takes into consideration today’s context in Brazil, especially Amerindian struggles. I focus on how Guattari’s thinking of the virtual, in dialogue with other contemporary authors, opens the way to heterogenetic processes, with their own ecopolitical consequences.
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  46.  8
    Breathing Song and Smoke: Ritual Intentionality and the Sustenance of an Interaffective Realm.Bernd Brabec de Mori & Elizabeth Rahman - 2020 - Body and Society 26 (2):130-157.
    In lowland South America, breath animates human and non-human bodies, pulsating through the materialities of organisms. Humans, however, should manage their bodies to recast and reconfigure breath in its most life-enhancing manifestations: singing and smoking. These are the specialized domains of those able to manage their vitalities in such a way as to produce potent effects in themselves and in the world around them, including influencing atmospheric conditions, the lives of animals and plants and the harming and healing of others. (...)
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  47.  67
    Realizing the Social Contract: The Case of Colonialism and Indigenous Peoples.Robert Lee Nichols - 2005 - Contemporary Political Theory 4 (1):42-62.
    From 1922 to 1924, the Iroquois Confederacy — a federal union of six aboriginal nations — sought resolution of a dispute between themselves and Canada at the League of Nations. In this paper, the historical events of the 1920s League are employed as a case study to explore the development of the international society of states in the early 20th century as it relates to the indigenous peoples of North America. Specifically, it will be argued that the early modern practice (...)
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  48. Theorizing Multiple Oppressions Through Colonial History: Cultural Alterity and Latin American Feminisms.Elena Ruíz - 2011 - APA Newsletter on Hispanic/Latino Issues in Philosophy 2 (11):5-9.
    The hermeneutic resources necessary for understanding Indigenous women’s lives in Latin America have been obscured by the tools of Western feminist philosophical practices and their travel in North-South contexts. Not only have ongoing practices of European colonization disrupted pre-colonial ways of knowing, but colonial lineages create contemporary public policies, institutions, and political structures that reify and solidify colonial epistemologies as the only legitimate forms of knowledge. I argue that understanding this foreclosure of Amerindian linguistic communities’ ability to collectively engage (...)
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  49.  30
    Hobbes Among the Savages: Politics, War, and Enmity in the So-called State of Nature.Allan M. Hillani - 2023 - Hobbes Studies 36 (1):97-121.
    In this article I argue that Thomas Hobbes’s theory of the “state of nature” should be understood as describing a thoroughly political situation. Hobbes’s exemplification of the state of nature by resorting to the “savages” of America should be taken in its ultimately paradoxical character, one that puts in question the stark opposition between a prepolitical natural state and the properly political state resulting from the “social contract.” Through the lenses of ethnographic studies and anthropological theory, I propose a reinterpretation (...)
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  50.  61
    Introduction: Contexts for a Comparative Relativism.Casper Bruun Jensen, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, G. E. R. Lloyd, Martin Holbraad, Andreas Roepstorff, Isabelle Stengers, Helen Verran, Steven D. Brown, Brit Ross Winthereik, Marilyn Strathern, Bruce Kapferer, Annemarie Mol, Morten Axel Pedersen, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Matei Candea, Debbora Battaglia & Roy Wagner - 2011 - Common Knowledge 17 (1):1-12.
    This introduction to the Common Knowledge symposium titled “Comparative Relativism” outlines a variety of intellectual contexts where placing the unlikely companion terms comparison and relativism in conjunction offers analytical purchase. If comparison, in the most general sense, involves the investigation of discrete contexts in order to elucidate their similarities and differences, then relativism, as a tendency, stance, or working method, usually involves the assumption that contexts exhibit, or may exhibit, radically different, incomparable, or incommensurable traits. Comparative studies are required to (...)
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