Tese
Sob o pavimento, a floresta: cidade e cosmopolítica
Fecha
2019-11-22Autor
Wellington Cançado Coelho
Institución
Resumen
The potential forest that exists under each city and the human and
non-human collectives that rexist them, as well as the anthropologies they engender, are the subjects of this thesis. To this end, it
proposes to review the structuring dualisms of modernity and its
(self)colonial presuppositions, the founding anthropocentric character of the modes of fabrication of the environment built in Brazil and
the people of commodity’s way of inhabiting. Design, the hegemonic method of producing human artifacts, the city, the spatial
product of this process, urbanization, extensive accumulation of the
Western mode of existence, and the Anthropocene, the era in which
human design became a geological force, are confronted by their
multiple reverse images that proliferate in and through indigenous
cinemas. Starting from the methodological possibilities of multispecies ethnography, epistemological possibilities of multinaturalist
perspectivism and cosmopolitics possibilities of indigenous cinemas, this thesis further investigates the possibilities of an anthropological intrusion at the heart of Applied Social Sciences, and
investigates the potential of a projective anthropology in which the
project – “onto-epistemological device” – is twisted by relationships
and the social is expanded beyond humans. Finally, it speculates
about forms of native alterity and extramodern spaces, other stories
than positivist mononaturalism, regressive utopias, and the standoff
of design in the ruins of progress, wondering the sensitive materiality of a future of rexistances, afroindigenizations, counter-colonizations, resurgences, and confluences.