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UnavailableJuan Javier Rivera Andía, "Non-Humans in Amerindian South America" (Berghahn, 2018)
Currently unavailable

Juan Javier Rivera Andía, "Non-Humans in Amerindian South America" (Berghahn, 2018)

FromNew Books in Sociology


Currently unavailable

Juan Javier Rivera Andía, "Non-Humans in Amerindian South America" (Berghahn, 2018)

FromNew Books in Sociology

ratings:
Length:
61 minutes
Released:
Aug 12, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In Non-Humans in Amerindian South America: Ethnographies of Indigenous Cosmologies, Rituals, and Songs (Berghahn, 2018), eleven researchers bring new ethnographies to bear on anthropological debates on ontology and the anthropocene. In this episode of New Books in Anthropology, the book’s editor Juan Javier Rivera Andía talks with host Jacob Doherty about the importance of ethnography for refreshing theoretical conversations, historicizing indigenous cosmologies in the centuries long waves of extractivism that have remade Amerindian worlds, and the persistence of more than human relationships in the face of violence and ecological crisis.
Juan Javier Rivera Andía is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Department of Anthropology of the Americas, the University of Bonn; his research examines rituals and oral tradition among indigenous groups of the Andes of South America, particularly Quechua-speaking people of central and Northern Peruvian highlands.
Jacob Doherty is a research associate in urban mobility at the Transport Studies Unit, University of Oxford, and, most recently, the co-editor of Labor Laid Waste, a special issue of International Labor and Working Class History.

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Released:
Aug 12, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Interviews with Sociologists about their New Books