Results 1 to 10 of about 155 (102)
Philippe Descola en Brocéliande
Why should a medievalist read Philippe Descola’s Par-delà Nature et Culture? First of all, Descola offers a system with which to rethink the epistemological relationship between history and anthropology, and between event and structure.
Florent Coste
exaly +3 more sources
Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Volume 61, Issue 1, Winter 2025.
europepmc +2 more sources
Claude Lévi-Strauss por Philippe Descola
Philippe Descola
exaly +3 more sources
Sull'antropocene. Introduzione alla traduzione di “Umano, troppo umano” di Philippe Descola
Articolo introduttivo alla traduzione di “Umano, troppo umano” di Philippe Descola.
Domenico Branca +2 more
doaj +1 more source
The Anthropocene narrative and Amerindian lifeworlds: anthropos, agency, and personhood
Abstract Based on the observation that the Anthropocene narrative signifies a departure from the Cartesian nature/culture division dominant within modernist science, this article explores notions of personhood and agency among Amerindian peoples in the Amazon, the Andes, and Mesoamerica in comparison to the corresponding notions in modernist discourses.
Dan Rosengren +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Traduzione del testo della conferenza inaugurale del simposio Comment penser l’anthropocène? organizzato da Philippe Descola e Catherine Larrère. Traduzione di Emanuele Fabiano e Domenico Branca.
Philippe Descola
doaj +1 more source
Abstract Natural wine is produced with organic grapes without the use of additives. As a social phenomenon, it comprises rural winemakers and urban consumers interconnected by a vibrant global community of distributors, bloggers, experts, and associations.
Pablo Alonso González +1 more
wiley +1 more source
PEASANTS, BRIGANDS, AND THE CHRONOPOLITICS OF THE NEW LEVIATHAN IN THE MEZZOGIORNO
ABSTRACT The image of a backward, archaic South whose barbarian population had remained at a low tier of civilization was a child of Italian unification. Not unlike the Orientalist East, the South that meridionalist discourse brought forth was a “chronotopos”—that is, a time‐space that had supposedly remained in the past.
FERNANDO ESPOSITO
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Bird language is an emerging practice among nature‐connection enthusiasts in which practitioners strive to comprehend the signals emitted by birds and other nonhuman beings. This practice shares much with contemporary academic interests in more‐than‐human sociality and foregrounds relational ways of knowing.
Ariel Appel, Nurit Bird‐David
wiley +1 more source
Courage in the Anthropocene: Towards a philosophical anthropology of the present
Abstract In the late 18th century, Immanuel Kant attracted attention for his criticisms of colonialism, that problematized the established boundaries between civilization and barbarism, and chastised English colonialism in particular. Some years later, however, in his lectures on Anthropology, he ventured some oddly racist views, concerning the ...
Julian Reid
wiley +1 more source

