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WORLD ANTHROPOLOGICAL UNION

CONGRESS 2024​

RoundTable

Anthropology and the construction of knowledge(s): a dialogue for an ethnography beyond the humanist ideal

moderators

    Maria Elena Martinez-Torres

    Nationality: Mexico

    Residence: Mexico

    Center for Research and Graduate Studies in Social Antrhopology, CIESAS Southeastern Campus

    Presence:Face to Face/ On Site

    Patricia dos Santos Pinheiro

    Nationality: Brazil

    Residence: Brazil

    Federal university of Paraíba

    Presence:Online

discussants

    Maria Elena Martinez-Torres

    Nationality: Mexico

    Residence: Mexico

    Center for Research and Graduate Studies in Social Antrhopology, CIESAS Southeastern Campus

    Presence:Face to Face/ On Site

    Charlotte Saenz

    Nationality: United States

    Residence: CA

    California Institute of Integral St

    Presence:Online

    Cory-Alice Andre-Johnson

    Nationality: United States

    Residence: United States

    Tulane University

    Presence:Online

    Luiza Dias Flores

    Presence:Online

Keywords:

Anticolonial Anthropology, Critical Pedagogy; Political Ecology-informed Education

Abstract:

In this round table we take a critical look at the ways in which academic learning takes place in antropology. Many times, the high specialization of knowledge imposed by colonial processes leaves aside fundamental elements in the construction of knowledge, such as affective bonds, corporeality, interactions with our environment, conflictive situations in the daily life of students and teachers, the ways of relating and communicating in different cultures, as well as crisis experiences. Our proposal consists of approaching perceptions, reflections, and sharing from diverse provocations about our current times, seeking to bring together interests and contributions between formal academic knowledge, popular knowledge, and that from the more-than-human world, which together promote dialogue, tension, ethical, poetic, and political expressions. More broadly, our proposal is to carry out a critical debate on the theoretical and methodological premises of ethnography in order to link personal experience and academic research, generating dialogues to think about an anticolonial anthropological project that includes forms of ‘not-knowing’. Beyond a humanist ideal, we refer to formulations that encourage us to recognize the different ways of relating to the world as keys to envisioning an academy inspired by resistance and committed to ethical principles of solidarity with the multiple lifeforms with which we share the planet.