IDACOR   23984
INSTITUTO DE ANTROPOLOGIA DE CORDOBA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Looks Like Viscera. Folds, Wraps, and Relations in the Southern Andes
Autor/es:
PAZZARELLI, FRANCISCO
Revista:
Social Analysis
Editorial:
Berghahn Books
Referencias:
Lugar: New York; Año: 2019 vol. 63 p. 45 - 65
ISSN:
0155-977X
Resumen:
This article explores how viscera, bodies, and forces emerge in resemblance to one another. In the connections between the animals? butcher, the treatment of body parts, and the rituals of herd marking in the Argentinean highlands, folds and wrappings of viscera, leathers, meats, and dances make things ?look like? something else in different scales, highlighting correspondences or reflections between entities. Each level of these compositions refers to another, and a change in one can affect all of them. Resemblances are constantly evaluated and topologically manipulated, either to enable their mutual stimulation or to avoid connections and thus to establish differences between the perspectives of different beings. This article argues that the fabrication of similarities and differences through the manipulation of resemblances offers a privileged key to an understanding of Andean and Amerindian sociality