“The attempt to see”. Interview with Marcio Goldman
Marcio Goldman, PhD in Anthropology from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and professor at the National Museum of the UFRJ, has researched for more than twenty years in the area of Ilhéus, state of Bahia, about the religions of the African matrix in Brazil and the conception of politics from...
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| Autores principales: | , |
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| Formato: | Artículo revista |
| Lenguaje: | Español |
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Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades. Museo de Antropología
2017
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| Acceso en línea: | https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/antropologia/article/view/16757 |
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| Sumario: | Marcio Goldman, PhD in Anthropology from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and professor at the National Museum of the UFRJ, has researched for more than twenty years in the area of Ilhéus, state of Bahia, about the religions of the African matrix in Brazil and the conception of politics from those spaces. Among his numerous publications are books such as Razão e diferença: afetividade, racionalidade e relativismo no pensamento de Lévy-Bruhl (1994); Antropologia, voto e representação política (1996); Alguma antropologia (1999); Como Funciona a Democracia: Uma Teoria Etnográfica Da Política (2006); Mais alguma antropologia: Ensaios de geografia do pensamento antropológico (2016).One of the most notable characteristics of his production is the care to "symmetrize" his own and "native" knowledge and practices. This activity requires on the part of the ethnographer a constant and always unfinished effort to look from the point of view of the other, to try to think of others without imposing the a priori of our own frameworks of intelligibility of the world. On this epistemological basis, Marcio takes up again the Malinowskian idea of "ethnographic theory" as a key notion to understand the specificity of anthropological knowledge, its particular ubiquity and capacity to generate a movement towards new ways of knowing.His attention to the ways in which people compartmentalize their world, define the beings that exist in it, the forms of relation with them, their ontological status, has to do with a series of themes that we have been problematizing in the Nucleus Nature-Culture, a space of formation and investigation that is developed in the Institute of Anthropology of Cordoba. From this space was generated the possibility of sharing with him in July last year a workshop called "The affects of the field in Anthropology", in which we take as the axis of work the concept of "affect" coined by Jeanne Favret-Saada (1990) and retaken by Marcio in his works. In the workshop, several topics related to field experience and anthropological work were developed, some of which are taken up here.This interview was originally conducted by and intended for undergraduate students in anthropology. The questions, formulated from the desire to train us as anthropologists, cover a wide range of topics: the training of anthropologists, fieldwork, the subjective transformations we face, the ideas and key readings that mark a researcher. With rich, exhaustive reflections, of great depth and openness, Marcio resumes from these questions some points of his own trajectory, proposals and positions on anthropological knowledge. |
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