In this bold reconsideration of the human sciences, an interdisciplinary team employ an expanded theoretical and geographical critical lens centring the notion of the encounter. Drawing insights from Indigenous and Latin American studies, nine case studies delve into the dynamics of encounters between researchers, intermediaries, and research subjects in imperial and colonial contexts across the Americas and Pacific. Essays explore ethical considerations and knowledge production practices that prevailed in field and expedition science, custodial institutions, and governance debates. They re-evaluate how individuals and communities subjected to research projects embraced, critiqued, or subverted them. Often, research subjects expressed their own aspirations, asserted sovereignty or autonomy, and exercised forms of power through interactions or acts of refusal. This volume signals the transformative potential of Indigenous studies and Latin American studies for shaping future scholarship on the history of the human sciences. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
For readers interested in the history of science, Indigenous studies, Latin American studies, and studies of empire and colonialism, this volume offers a revisionist history of research encounters in the human sciences in imperial and colonial contexts in the Americas and the Pacific. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Recenzijas
'An original and outstanding collection of papers on the interaction of indigenous knowledge, history of science and imperial power. A must read for historians, anthropologists, Latin-Americanists and anyone interested in the ethics of research in the human and social sciences.' Marcos Cueto, Casa de Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 'This interdisciplinary volume sheds new light on the production of knowledge in the human sciences in the Americas by focusing our attention on the disquieting, often uncomfortable, but also multilayered and sometimes ambiguous, encounters it relied on. In an effort to decolonize histories of science, its chapters tell stories of Indigenous agency, refusal and strategic politics to subvert forms of domination and control. By engaging this past, contributors call for an ethics of research in the present that 'stands with' rather than merely giving back to the communities they write with and about.' Sandra Rozental, Centro de Estudios Históricos, El Colegio de México
Papildus informācija
A revisionist history of the human sciences reframing research encounters and knowledge-making practices in imperial and colonial contexts.
Preface;
1. An introduction to troubling encounters Adam Warren, Julia
E. Rodriguez and Stephen T. Casper; Part I. Relationality in Field and
Expedition Science:
2. 'Skull hunters on the pampa: anthropology as uncanny
encounter in Argentina's 'last massacre'' Julia E. Rodriguez;
3. 'Subverting
the anthropometric gaze: racial science in the 1912 Yale Peruvian expedition'
Adam Warren;
4. 'Modest witnesses of violence: salvage ethnography and the
capture of aché children' Sebastiįn Gil-Riańo; Part II. Institutional
Encounters, Discipline, and Settler Colonial Logics:
5. 'Replacing native
Hawaiian kinship with social scientific care: settler colonial
transinstitutionalization of children in the territory of Hawai'i' Maile
Arvin;
6. 'Port of epistemic riches: social science research and
incarceration in mid-twentieth-century Puerto Rico' Alberto Ortiz-Dķaz;
7.
'The imperial logic of American bioethics: holding science and history to
account' Laura Stark; Part III. Governance, Politics, and Self-Determination:
8. 'Investigating Cuauhtémoc's bones: politics, truth, and mestizo
nationalism in Mexico' Karin Rosemblatt;
9. 'Unequal encounters: debating
resource scarcity, population, and hunger in the early cold war' Eve Buckley;
10. 'Bureaucratic vulnerability: possession, sovereignty, and relationality
in Brazilian research regulation' Rosanna Dent; Conclusions and Epilogues:
11. 'Unsettling encounters' Stephen T. Casper;
12. 'Feel it in your bones:
the difference indigenous studies makes' Marķa Elena Garcķa;
13. 'The pole is
back home' Gabriela Soto Laveaga; Works cited; Index.
Adam Warren is Associate Professor of History at the University of Washington, Seattle. He is the author of Medicine and Politics in Colonial Peru: Population Growth and the Bourbon Reforms (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010), and the coauthor of Baptism through Incision: The Postmortem Cesarean Operation in the Spanish Empire (Penn State University Press, 2020). Julia E. Rodriguez is Professor of History at the University of New Hampshire (USA). She is the author ofCivilizing Argentina: Science, Medicine, and the Modern State(University of North Carolina Press, 2006) and editor of the open-source website HOSLAC: History of Science in Latin America and the Caribbean (www.hoslac.org). Stephen T. Casper is Professor of History at Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York. His research focuses on the history of the human sciences, neuroscience, and neurology, and his latest monograph, Punch Drunk and Dementia: A Cultural History of Concussion, 1870Present, is under contract with Johns Hopkins Press and explores the cultural history of brain injury and violence in the modern world.