On People, Sensorial Perception, and Potential Affinity in Southern Chile
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| Publication date | 2022 |
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| Book title | Theorizing Relations in Indigenous South America |
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| Series | Studies in Social Analysis |
| Chapter | 3 |
| Pages (from-to) | 68-82 |
| Publisher | New York: Berghahn |
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| Abstract |
Through an ethnographic exploration of Pehuenche conceptu-alizations of doubles and of greeting and funerary practices in Southern Chile, this article considers the ontological relevance of sensorial percep-tion as a main operator for stabilizing the tension between autonomy and dependence on otherness. The article aims to establish how relations between ‘real people’ or che, in Pehuenche daily life, do not precede mutual sensorial perception; instead, they can be seen as the result of such perceptions. In so doing, and building upon the concept of ‘potential affinity’ as a persisting relational principle of relatedness, I show how the minimal unit of analysis of sensorial perception is not composed of sepa-rated unities. Rather, it is an assemblage of multiple capacities involving both visible and invisible relational entities.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Note | Originally published as a special issue of Social Analysis, volume 63, issue 2. |
| Language | English |
| Related publication | On People, Sensorial Perception, and Potential Affinity in Southern Chile |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.3167/9781800733299 https://doi.org/10.1515/9781800733312-005 |
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