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América-Latina e o giro botânico nos estudos culturais




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América-Latina e o giro botânico nos estudos culturais. (2023). Tabula Rasa, 46, 49-64. https://doi.org/10.25058/20112742.n46.03

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Aleandro Ponce de León Autor

Aleandro Ponce de León,

Maestría en Sociología de la Universidad de Texas en Austin. Candidato doctoral en Estudios Culturales.


Este artigo traça os contornos do recente giro para a vida vegetal dentro dos estudos culturais latino-americanos, a partir da leitura de três livros: o volume editado por Monica Gagliano, John Ryan e Patricia Vieira The Language of Plants: Science, Philosophy, Literature; o livro de Theresa Miller Plant Kin: A Multispecies Ethnography in Indigenous Brazil; e The Poetics of Plants in Spanish American Literature de Lesley Wylie. O escrito apresenta algumas das contribuições e possibilidades que fazem os trabalhos no âmbito do giro botânico para os diálogos dos estudos culturais e, depois, aponta como a especificidade latino-americana oferece e demanda estratégias metodológicas e conceptuais inovadoras para abordar as emaranhadas relações entre os humanos e as plantas no contexto regional. Pensar o botânico desde as tradições de pensamento latino-americano, também pode enriquecer as conversas do giro botânico e levá-las para territórios caracterizados por hibridações e multiplicidades inesperadas.


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