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Radical Anthropology

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TONIGHT
Everybody welcome, just turn up!
LIVE @UCLAnthropology and on ZOOM

🌔Tues Mar 11, 6:30pm (London UTC)🌕
Chris Knight on
'On women and jaguars: why perspectivism got it so wrong'

Across Amazonia, myths hold that in early times it was the jaguars, parrots, tapirs and other animals who first invented bows and arrows, cooking fire, ceremonial buildings, religious ceremonies and other complex cultural accomplishments. Then humans stole these things from the animals, elevating themselves above all other creatures – but at the cost of losing their former ability to engage in easy conversation with the animal world. This mythic view of our origins is the reverse of the Darwinian narrative which our own culture holds up as science.

In this talk, will introduce a recent trend in social anthropology – known as ‘perspectivism’ – and discuss whether such radically different ways of perceiving our origins and place in nature can be made to converge.

Chris will be speaking LIVE in the Daryll Forde, 2nd Floor of UCL Anthropology Dept, 14 Taviton St, London WC1H 0BW. Come in good time by 6:30pm before doors close please. You can also join on ZOOM ID 384 186 2174 passcode Wawilak

In research on this talk, drawing on 's classic ethnography, 'Amazonian Cosmos', Chris came across this excellent blog from @TootTropiques back in 2012. This discusses Reichel-Dolmatoff's history in relation to his enormous contributions to and rights. Many anthropologists have taken inspiration from his work.

ethnoground.blogspot.com/2012/

ethnoground.blogspot.comPutting the Reich back in Reichel-Dolmatoff: Nazi past of legendary Colombian anthropologist revealedNews, photography, research and non-academic writing about indigenous peoples of the Amazon

'I am a female jaguar
I am a female jaguar
You are afraid
You are afraid'

girl's initiation song, as she emerges at , the major community ceremony of her first 🩸
(From Peter Gow, 'An Amazonian Myth and its History' p.168-9)